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