Saturday, 23 June 2012

Start

I am a writer. 
I am sort of a writer.
I write.
I write  regularly?


More accurately, I like to think that I write. Sure, I'm a member of a writers' group based in Tokyo which hosts monthly poetry reading events. Sure, I won a few awards for my poetry when I was in high school, (awards which are most likely rusting away in some forgotten corner in my family's home in Jamaica) but today, I came to the crushing realisation that I can't call myself a writer (not even an aspiring one) if I don't write every day.  


At some point during my 45-minute lunch break today, I realised that I used to write a lot more when I was in high school. (I used to write a lot when I was in college too, but that was mostly academic stuff; 18-credit semesters filled with 20-hour work weeks plus time-consuming extra-curriculars didn't leave much time for poetry or prose.) High school - the time when it was difficult to catch me anywhere without a pencil and a Mead composition book. So, what's different now?

As soon as the question popped into my head, the answer came to me like a jolt of electricity - I wasn't learning.

Now, I know some of you might be feeling the impulse to start typing with great passion about how there is a lesson in life every day, blah blah blah. However, what I'm talking about is active learning. I'm talking about using your brain and going out to find out about/how to do new things instead of expecting life to wash knowledge over you while you passively sit back and do jack shit. I'm talking about taking the time to learn a new language just because, to learn a new skill or to perfect something that you started before but let go.

I'm talking about using learning as a way to unleash the creative subconscious. At least, that's what I plan to do for myself. My plan is to do something different every 30 days. Why 30 days? It's a nice even number, plus I was inspired by the following video:









This blog is to serve as a log of what I hope will be a lifelong project for me. To start, I've chosen something relatively easy. I have been lagging in my Japanese language studies, so my first 30-day project will be: [300 new Japanese words] in 30 days. That will be 10 new words every day. Not 10 JLPT N4 words, either, nor will there be any rollover (I only did 5 today, so I'll do 15 tomorrow, I promise). 10 every day. For 30 days.





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