On Writing
A letter to myself… Ramblings on knowledge, ideas and writing
My first reader is myself. Why am I writing? For myself, to help me manage my knowledge; help me to structure my thoughts; help me to get a trace of what I thought at a specific time in my life. Why now and not before even later? I really don’t know. I just start to find the benefit of writing. How I found it? By writing; as a child I wasn’t literate oriented; I was playing in the woods, hunting everything that moved. Eventually I worked in a library. I was young; I hadn’t really read books by myself before. I checked them, I manipulated them and I fall in love with them. Since then, I was ordering hundreds of books at my local library and at Amazon; books on any type of subjects. Since then, hundreds, thousands of worlds opened to me at once. I was privileged to be in touch with other human beings’ ideas. If someone writes a thing, it’s because there is an idea behind it. Ideas are the fuel of Knowledge. Reading something is trying to get the fuel to understand the knowledge generated by it combustion. The possibilities are awesome. You can get the knowledge you just learn, get it as is; interpolate from it; extrapolate from it; infer with it; put it in relation with other bit of knowledge you have; then find new knowledge or meanings. Everything can be knowledge; knowledge is everywhere just waiting to be understood. Writing is a way to understand it, to communicate it and to archive it.
People that had read my about section know that I started to write this blog to increase my English skills. Why do I write on security? Because it’s a field of interest and that I have things to write about. Sometime I can be right; sometime I can be wrong. In both cases the aims are the same: learning, understanding and sharing.
Do I have readers other then me? Probably some. Do people syndicate my blog? I don’t have idea. Do people like what I write? Some possibly, other no. Do I care? I’m not too sure. I first write for myself. I share on the web what I write in the case that one person can find one of my thought useful to himself. If I upgrade my English skills by writing this blog, if I learn from my search and from others’ comments and if I succeed in being understood then my goals are fully reached.
I bought the Oxford’s essential Guide to Writing this Christmas. I just started to read it in parallel with The Da Vinci Code (Yeah I know, I’m a little slow on this one) and I found it a really interesting writing. Thomas S. Kane gets to the point and had written some really interesting things that everyone loves been remembered:
… And so people say, “I can’t think of anything to write about.”
That’s strange, because life is fascinating. The solution is to open yourself to experience. To look around. To describe what you see and hear. To read. Reading takes you into other minds and enriches your own. A systematic way of enriching your ideas and experiences is to keep a commonplace book and journal.
I’ll also rewrite his introduction that is really inspirational:
Two broad assumptions underlie this book: (1) that writing is a rational activity, and (2) that it is a valuable activity.
To say that writing is rational means nothing more than that it is an exercise of mind requiring the mastery of techniques anyone can learn. Obviously, there are limits: one cannot learn to write like Shakespeare or Charles Dickens. You can’t become a genius by reading book.
But you don’t have to be a genius to write clear, effective English. You just have to understand what writing involves and to know how to handle words and sentences and paragraphs. That you can learn. If you do, you can communicate what you want to communicate in words other people can understand. This book will help by showing you what good writers do.
The second assumption is that writing is worth learning. It is of immediate practical benefit in almost any job or career. Certainly there are many jobs in which you can get along without being able to write clearly. If you know how to write, however, you will get along faster and farther.
There is another, more profound value to writing. We create ourselves by words. Before we are businesspeople or lawyers or engineers or teachers, we are human beings. Or growth as human beings on our capacity to understand and to use language. Writing is a way of growing. No one would argue that being able to write will make you morally better. But it will make you more complex and more interesting—In a word, more human.
Is there anything that I can say after these words? Only one thing, Have a happy new year!
Max
January 1, 2005 — 10:39 am
Very interesting post. I quoted it on my weblog (an italian blog) because I feel mine your words. Sorry for the english, I usually read in english, but rarely write ๐ Thank you, bye Max
Fred
January 1, 2005 — 10:40 am
Hello Max! Thank for the kind words. I finally got at least one reader ๐ So, don’t be sorry for your english, mine is probably not really better. The importent is that the message as reached you and that you understoot it. I’m a french canadian and I have notting to say about others’ english. What impressed me when I went to europe, some years before, was that a majority of poeple seemed to master 2, 3 or 4 langages! It’s really not the case on the new continent… So, take care of you, Saluations, Fred
Max
January 1, 2005 — 10:40 am
i’m afraid you’ve not been in Italy: here people say “we got the mos beautiful language in the world, why should we learn another one?”. At the same time, our speeches are filled with anglicisms, sometimes ridiculous… I’m surprised by your news about the new continent, though. For work I update a website, I haven’t monstruous skills in security, but I’m convinced anyone who use a PC should knom something about, so your readers will surely grow in number. Bye Max
Fred
January 1, 2005 — 10:41 am
Hello, I spent 1 day in Milan. It’s sure that I hadn’t talk to thousands of Italians and them who I talks with didn’t form an homogenous group that represent the population; so I had good time there, it’s what really count. It’s sure that it’s not everybody that spoke many languages but in major cities it was quite surprising. Whatโs quite interesting in security is that simple principles apply in all type of security domains; in the networked and the real world. You can learn a lot, from old WW1 and WW2 veteran biographies or from mathematician from CalTech, on security. Iโm happy to see that you like what I read; itโs always pleasant to read it. Salutations, Fred
Joni Hoppen
April 29, 2006 — 1:31 am
Hey, I don’t know why I cant sleep this night and I dont know how google has found you letter online here….I just know that I loved what you’ve wrote… What do you think about to write something and to put it inside of a bottle and throw it to the ocean?
Be in peace!!!
Fred
April 29, 2006 — 9:20 am
Hi Joni,
Thanks for your kind words.
Considering that I can use email, and that I can throw any message on my blog, making it available to anybody who want to read it, I would say that throwing a bottle in the ocean for communication purpose would be pollution ๐
Have a nice day,
Take care,
Fred