island.txt 4.0 KB

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  1. July 2006I've discovered a handy test for figuring out what you're addicted
  2. to. Imagine you were going to spend the weekend at a friend's house
  3. on a little island off the coast of Maine. There are no shops on
  4. the island and you won't be able to leave while you're there. Also,
  5. you've never been to this house before, so you can't assume it will
  6. have more than any house might.What, besides clothes and toiletries, do you make a point of packing?
  7. That's what you're addicted to. For example, if you find yourself
  8. packing a bottle of vodka (just in case), you may want to stop and
  9. think about that.For me the list is four things: books, earplugs, a notebook, and a
  10. pen.There are other things I might bring if I thought of it, like music,
  11. or tea, but I can live without them. I'm not so addicted to caffeine
  12. that I wouldn't risk the house not having any tea, just for a
  13. weekend.Quiet is another matter. I realize it seems a bit eccentric to
  14. take earplugs on a trip to an island off the coast of Maine. If
  15. anywhere should be quiet, that should. But what if the person in
  16. the next room snored? What if there was a kid playing basketball?
  17. (Thump, thump, thump... thump.) Why risk it? Earplugs are small.Sometimes I can think with noise. If I already have momentum on
  18. some project, I can work in noisy places. I can edit an essay or
  19. debug code in an airport. But airports are not so bad: most of the
  20. noise is whitish. I couldn't work with the sound of a sitcom coming
  21. through the wall, or a car in the street playing thump-thump music.And of course there's another kind of thinking, when you're starting
  22. something new, that requires complete quiet. You never
  23. know when this will strike. It's just as well to carry plugs.The notebook and pen are professional equipment, as it were. Though
  24. actually there is something druglike about them, in the sense that
  25. their main purpose is to make me feel better. I hardly ever go
  26. back and read stuff I write down in notebooks. It's just that if
  27. I can't write things down, worrying about remembering one idea gets
  28. in the way of having the next. Pen and paper wick ideas.The best notebooks I've found are made by a company called Miquelrius.
  29. I use their smallest size, which is about 2.5 x 4 in.
  30. The secret to writing on such
  31. narrow pages is to break words only when you run out of space, like
  32. a Latin inscription. I use the cheapest plastic Bic ballpoints,
  33. partly because their gluey ink doesn't seep through pages, and
  34. partly so I don't worry about losing them.I only started carrying a notebook about three years ago. Before
  35. that I used whatever scraps of paper I could find. But the problem
  36. with scraps of paper is that they're not ordered. In a notebook
  37. you can guess what a scribble means by looking at the pages
  38. around it. In the scrap era I was constantly finding notes I'd
  39. written years before that might say something I needed to remember,
  40. if I could only figure out what.As for books, I know the house would probably have something to
  41. read. On the average trip I bring four books and only read one of
  42. them, because I find new books to read en route. Really bringing
  43. books is insurance.I realize this dependence on books is not entirely good—that what
  44. I need them for is distraction. The books I bring on trips are
  45. often quite virtuous, the sort of stuff that might be assigned
  46. reading in a college class. But I know my motives aren't virtuous.
  47. I bring books because if the world gets boring I need to be able
  48. to slip into another distilled by some writer. It's like eating
  49. jam when you know you should be eating fruit.There is a point where I'll do without books. I was walking in
  50. some steep mountains once, and decided I'd rather just think, if I
  51. was bored, rather than carry a single unnecessary ounce. It wasn't
  52. so bad. I found I could entertain myself by having ideas instead
  53. of reading other people's. If you stop eating jam, fruit starts
  54. to taste better.So maybe I'll try not bringing books on some future trip. They're
  55. going to have to pry the plugs out of my cold, dead ears, however.