Dood, tha KS for the advice. I'm writing a great story and I've forgotten two good ideas because I didn't write them down. I was able to come up with the ideas again after brain storming, but I need to wrote things down before doing anything else.
there's a Korean trend/phrase for choosing tactile, "old-fashioned" things to escape our fast-paced, digital lives. You see it in the States too but it's more associated with hipsters or the cottage-core aesthetic. It's called "analog life" where people choose to listen to vinyl records, have ticking clocks, use pencil or fountain pens, read physical books, make pour over coffee, sit in a cabin and stare at the scenery or listen to the rain, go camping and cook on a fire, etc. It's basically intentionally choosing things that might take longer but enjoying the process of it and slowing down your mind, almost meditation in a way.
Oh yeah. Most people don’t do everything. It’s kinda like saying “I’m going camping” but just lighting a fire pit in the backyard vs going backpacking. For instance, your friend makes you a pour over coffee and as your listening to the water drip as they methodically use a goose neck kettle you might remark “you live such an analogue life, it’s so peaceful to make coffee this way”
I actually love that! There's something about the idea of "simplification." "Returning to the past could be a wonderful way to introduce a little more peace in everyday life. I've found it very soothing to just take a day without my phone, or read a physical book instead of being on my phone
I’m a 63 year old engineer who uses electronic devices to keep my life in order. I’m super disciplined and have no issue with it. But being from the baby boomer generation I’m still attracted to paper quite often. Either using paper to make lists or picking up a paper copy of a magazine. I watched your video to see why a younger person would want to spend more time on paper. I was totally impressed by your open mindedness and stating the obvious about distraction. Keep up the good work and push the message to others. Our distractions today can be reduced by choice; just like you’re doing. Well done.
As an engineering student we had our electronics professor say "theoreticaly in your everyday life you should only use tools that you would be able to remake, or to make out of said tools. Otherwise, it means the tool is smarter than you" he was a wise man.
I've found that buying a cheap notebook is more valuable than an expensive one. Fancy journals make me nervous about writing something dumb or make me more concerned with making the notes look nice, rather than freely expressing the thought.
I actually had same feelings. And then I bought cheapest available book from stationary market, and then I wrote with whole hearted irrespective of pen / pencil / look / kind of hand writings. It was basically used for writing out all kinds of stuff relevant / irrelevant; kind of dump-yard for my thoughts. I used to do burn everything at 15 days interval. I didn't do it for too long and after a year; I left it.
Ohmigosh yes! I now use a paper planner as well as my phone calender. I was afraid to use a planner because of the videos of people making the planner art. That’s not me. Mine is full of nearly illegible scrawl that says “doctor 2pm” and such. I completely get the fear of messing up a beautiful notebook or planner.
I fills my heart with joy when I see younglings discovering the pleasures of analogic life. No constant notifications, no empy batteries, no fear of having your notebook stolen for it's market value. You are the master of your time and your activities, and you control when you have contact with other people.
Until the 1990s, it was common for adults to carry with them "a little black book" or something similar in a suit pocket or handbag. That little black book had phone numbers and mailing addresses of relatives and friends, lists of things to do, appointment reminders, birthday reminders, ideas and plans, poems they wrote, hand-written recipes, etc. This was very, very common in the days before smart phones. And that little black book never needed charging to function.
Albeit that was necessary at that time ofc, phones are way better for so much but distarctions are endless. Tho when rooms start having charging function with wireless charging being super strong that will be rly cool i must say! 💪
No, it just needed a writing implement, good handwriting, a light source to see it, and eventually ran out of pages even if you discarded the old pages. But it didn’t need to charge, that is true. Acting like the technology of the past is better than the technology of today is lunacy, if it was better we’d still be using it. We stopped using those, almost universally, because the overwhelming majority can agree that smartphones are better.
Seeing a young person discover the mental peace that existed for all of us prior to smart phones is pretty neat. There is something to be said for the freedom of not being electronically tethered.
@@delightfulgenius4635 That book sounds interesting! Thanks for mentioning it. I don’t doubt for a minute that there are serious consequences to our brains. But, I’m older and really can observe the differences in myself now and 30 yrs ago. I can’t imagine what this constant and relentless “input” is doing to young minds.
I was thinking the same. Born in the 70s and have thought a lot lately about how I can "go back" to that time. I'm probably looking at it through rose-coloured glasses, but I sure remember it as a time that I was more content, worried less, and just generally enjoyed life more. I often wonder how young people must feel never having that other perspective/way of life. I guess they don't miss something they've never had.
I gotta be honest, and I say this as someone who uses a notepad to draw a lot. That sounds very silly. We're not tethered to anything. Phones don't magically zap away mental peace as you call it. You know what does that? Ourselves. I use my phone to call people and take notes all the time, I'm frankly confused why this is somehow a problem.
Man I love the idea of reclaiming ourselves from the digital world. About a year ago I got tired of my Apple Watch telling me to breathe and switched to a vintage Timex. I got tired of recharging AirPods and switched back to corded headphones that work every time I need them to. I don’t say these things in a smug hipster way but to intentionally live on my terms and use my tools instead of the other way around. Thanks for this video
This! I got an Apple Watch not long ago, and immediately I was like… this feels wrong, having my phone tied to me physically I also despised going to use my AirPods, only to find they weren’t charged… I bought a 12$ set of over the ear headphones and much prefer them never needing to be charged
I've never bought into smart watches, if you're super into fitness then just get a fitbit or something I guess, but I definitely don't need a less useful harder to use version of my phone strapped to my wrist, sometimes I don't want to see notifications etc so I just put my phone on silent and flip it over, I feel like a smart watch is just another way of making you hooked to every little alert that goes off
As an artist, my physical sketchbook is irreplaceable! Not just for my creative growth but also for my emotional health! Plus I can’t tell you how many ideas I’ve forgotten about writing down but getting to reread forgotten ideas is always a fun surprise!
I love this video. The "have you ever opened your phone to do something specific and got distracted" bit resonated strongly with me. Attention hijacking is so real. Another positive for the notebook over the phone is that upgrades and replacements are so much cheaper, and no contract or hidden fees! Seriously, good stuff.
The google search feature bugs me, how they now have a feed of articles they think you’ll be interested in. Guaranteed distraction! Fortunately there’s a widget that goes straight to the search bar and blocks the suggestions
Attn hijacking, I like that although I currently refer to it as side-trackery. 80% of my work day is just that. So everytime im being pulled off my own tasks then I use paper notes or NotePad if on the PC.
It seems very much like the digital equivalent of the doorway effect. (For context, from Wikipedia: “The 'doorway effect' or 'location updating effect' is a replicable psychological phenomenon characterized by short-term memory loss when passing through a doorway or moving from one location to another. We tend to forget items of recent significance immediately after crossing a boundary and often forget what we were thinking about or planning on doing upon entering a different room. Research suggests that this phenomenon occurs both at literal boundaries (e.g., moving from one room to another via a door) and metaphorical boundaries (e.g., imagining traversing a doorway, or even when moving from one desktop window to another on a computer).”) So while apps demanding our attention is certainly one piece of the puzzle, blaming it specifically on technology might be missing the underlying foundation of what’s happening. Just an observation, though.
The pride and satisfaction that comes from seeing your old journals, sitting there full of memories all together, it just can't be matched. I have 5 used journals my current one for the last 7 years or so, and seeing them all together is amazing.
I have a few I think like 5 or 6 now but they are all just blueprints, comics, work, or random doodles but this next one I'm gonna at least attempt to take detailed notes
You just cannot beat the feeling of a paper and the tactile learning when you write something out. My memory is better when I engage as many senses as I can into my learning (paper books, pen writing etc). I’m such a paper/pen kinda gal and people jokingly call me a grandma for it. I’m in my 20s lol
Well then, young lady, you are wise for your years. Of course, one can tell who is experienced in writing, by their grammar, alone. I definitely appreciate writers, and tolerate commenters. Sometimes, its so hard to even decipher the very thought processes they're trying to convey, because its one, long, run-on sentence. Usually full of googly-moogly, anyway.
I always draw my comics on paper, with pencils and ink. I got a screen tablet for digital colouring, but might just go back to alcohol markers (helps that they can be had dirt cheap in Japan). I letter digitally, though. Nobody can read my scribble, I know my limits!
Thank you for saying "...it couldn't care less." It makes me crazy when people incorrectly say "...could..." I love this! I've been using a paper planner, commonplace book, and journal for years and I wouldn't trade those for anything. For me, I love the ability to just pick up my journal and see a thought or a photo or a memory without swiping or having to make sure my battery isn't too low, etc. You're so right about being "present" when you don't have your phone. It's a precious gift to have that time.
It's also so nice he didn't swear! It's gotten so bad that I have to always brace myself for hearing bad language every time I start to watch a video. So infuriating.
I agree completely. My grandmother, who journaled for many decades, inspired me to start journaling in 1983. Needless to say, I’ve considered many reasons to write with my pen in hand (or pencil). Great video, well projected! Thank you.
I struggle with ADHD and anxiety. Writing in a notebook has fundamentally changed how I process my emotions and Ideas. Or just my thoughts general. I guess you could say it changed my life in some way? Anyways, I think the biggest advantage that comes from writing, is simply the amount of time it takes to write something down. Within the amount of time it takes to write down a thought or idea, you get time to refine and focus your train of thought. It really helps me slow down, and most of the time (if not every time) I gain new insight that I hadn't previously observed. Also, keep it up! It's obvious you put a lot of effort into your videos and it shows! Can't wait for what's next!
I have ADHD and use a notebook to write down all the random things that pop into my head as I’m trying to complete a task. Example: One day I was working on a report and suddenly thought “What’s the name of that island were all the rich people used to vacation and the a volcano erupted and wiped out half the island?” ADD people will understand how this happens. So instead of going down the internet rabbit hole where I look up one thing that leads to another and on and on until an hour has gone by wasted on random nonsense. So I keep a notepad next to me and when a random thought pops into my mind, I write “That island destroyed by a volcano” and go back to my task, and once I’m finished with the things I need to do, I can look up all the random stuff I wrote down. Half the time it’s no longer of interest and I can move on to other things. It really helps keep me on task.
Thank you so much for showing me this! I decided to try it. I had the goal of carrying it everywhere for a month. I've been carrying a little notebook everywhere for almost 2 weeks now. I absolutely love it. I have it jam packed with content. Journal entries, little drawings, appointments, comics, shower thoughts, even random garbage for the sake of random garbage. I numbered the pages, and added a table of contents for quick reference to important pages. It's organized chaos and it's my own little slice of heaven. Once it's full I'm gonna buy another one. Again, thank you so much for showing me this!
I'm a college student and I've found that taking actual, physical notes and drawings of things on pen and paper is vital to my absorption and memorization of my class content. Yes, it takes much longer to write on paper than to simply type, but that's kind of the point. It makes me focus more on what I'm reading. I really don't study much outside of my normal note taking and I find I don't need to mostly because of this technique.
I totally agree, the only difference for me is I use an iPad for all my notes because I write A LOT and have a lot of technical drawing I have to do so the iPad just saves a lot of space in my bag but I’ve started to notice a difference in people who write notes vs type
@@NotChronos you don't need to write every word said. The most important thing is listening to the professor and being able to summarize it. It can sounds hard to do in real time, but not really, it's a matter of practice :)
You touched on something that I have been thinking about for a while and I think I'm going to start running with it. Before smart phones I used to write "my brain" in a little book I carried in my back pocket. I can't remember the last time my mind felt collected. I'm going to dive into this. Thank you.
No way!!! When I was in high school and university I had something similar and I called it my “brain book” as well!!! I’m drawn more and more to try it again!
Not a "brain notebook", but I also kept a notebook I used to pour my emotions and thoughts into. I don't do this regularly, but I think that this thread is motivating me to do this more. Love you guys
I remember back in 2006 when my sister was in college and I would visit her, students didn't really have smart phones. I carried a notebook with me at a party and was writing down rules to drinking games and a guy asked me. "Why are you carrying a notebook with you?" To which I responded "Dude we are in college." He nodded in agreement.
@@brinettevalorie4554how did it mess u up? As long as you have social media apps deleted I don’t think you would have a problem with it. And minimal apps. The only social media I got is TH-cam
It’s good to note how well of a speaker and presenter you are actually. In fact, I didn’t see myself losing my attention to anything because you structured the video, and your words so well to where I didn’t WANT to get distracted. Well done!
I mean, it dragged at the end. He stretched it out way too much. And the gaps in the music made the music in itself distracting. Nice concept and video. I wonder if he planned this out in his notebook or on his phone.
As a 16 year old who just started carrying around a little notebook like this one about a week ago it was very cool to find this video and see others come to the same conclusion I did about a week ago. Planners never worked for me because they were too big and felt too important but this little notebook feels just informal enough for me to use it. I’m starting school tomorrow with a to-do list already written on my most recent page so I can keep track of all the stuff I need to do all without having to deal with the strict phone policy of my school. Wish me luck! :D
@Azu10157 I don’t use it as creative writing but more “hey this is cool” stuff. Maybe some doodles one day, if I come up with any cool ideas I might write them down, things to remember (I have bad memory lol), funny things I hear that I want to bring up with one of my friends or something, loadouts for a video game, literally whatever. If I would write it down on my notes app on my phone regularly, instead I’ll write it here. It doesn’t need to have any meaning, heck its only a dollar no need to write my life’s story in there. Heck, I rarely write anything about myself in there, it’s just for extra convenience without a phone, no deeper meaning
@Azu10157 I also have a little notebook I carry in my pocket at all times, and I write everything and anything, literally. It's mainly to do lists to keep me focused (breaking things down into small tasks really help my procrastinating ass), random thoughts and ideas (I often write on it when a class is making me bored or sleepy just to vent), notes about games I play, drawings, and sometimes I like to journal a bit since I date these notebooks and go back through them every once in a while for nostalgia. And by journal I just mean "went to a football game for the first time, that was cool" kind of stuff. Word vomiting can be very therapeutic, and you are more likely to remember things you write down, so I just write anything that comes to mind. The most important things are: notebooks are meant to be used, get a cheap one so you don't feel guilty about using it and just abuse it; don't force yourself to write or it becomes a chore rather than something for you. Try to have it on you or close to you at all times so you look at it and feel compelled to write. And take your time, I have notebooks that were finished in a month, some in a few months, some took a few years. No one else is gonna read it, so just enjoy it for yourself
When I’m trapped in a place (meetings, presentations, talks) and can’t really take out my phone without being rude I find scrawling my frustrations helps me not to scream.. I’m adhd and struggle all the time to find tools that keep me organized without overwhelming me with too much detail
I found some 3-month daily planners a couple years ago that are about the size of a phone, and they helped me so much while I was in school! Then I found out my university gave out free ones that were a fair bit bigger but had the whole school year and were completely free (they were for the freshmen each year, but I just visited the first year experience office a couple weeks into fall semester when they were desperate to get rid of them), so I switched to those. I would assign myself specific homework items to each day of the week so I could balance my work throughout the week and know I didn’t have to worry about x assignment until the next day.
This is why I like real books as opposed to e-books. Of course, I'm older and grew up before the computer age. About a year or more ago, I dumped Social Media. It was too distracting and very addictive. I'm definitely better off. I also started writing a journal and that's been a good thing for me. Stay the course you've plotted young man. It's much better and healthier for you.
@@kleyayarizba Agreed. I have a Kindle and the Kindle ap on my iPad. I have books on there that I couldn't afford to get the real version of as they're rare or out of print. So in that respect, ebooks are handy.
I am in the same boat. Phones were attached to the wall, books were physical things, we talked face to face with each other. I love books, especially old books. I do have a Nook and lots of e-books, but there are some books that are not suited to being electronic. I have a book on hat making and on fabric manipulation. Those don't work as an e-book. I am happy to see this 'new' trend of putting phones down and actually thinking things out.
why is no one talking about how great your storytelling is! aside from the idea of writing on a notebook, the art of your storytelling together with the mix of film-like plus the vlog-like visuals and how good your sounds matches the emotion of your script. you also incorporated a character with a funny humor in the story that enhances the whole experience of watching your video. No wonder I am convinced that writing on a notebook was actually good for us.
As someone with ADHD, carrying a small note pad and pen in my pocket at all times has completely changed my life.I can keep to do lists, make quick notes of things to remember and really helps me get stuff done all day.
I was going to make this same comment!!! I realized that I waste time everyday yet I rarely use social media, don't watch tv or like shows, (just an occasional movie when invited), don't play video games or apps, not on youtube much (believe it or not lol) or even read much like I always say I want to. Yet somehow I get distracted on my phone?? I waste so much time everyday writing lists or looking up things related to my random and intrusive thoughts and getting lost in them 😂 I can't focus on tasks because I feel like I have to do something before I forget or while I have the urge. Now I write them down so I can forget about them in the moment and if they're that important I'll go back to them!
What notebook do you recommend? I am looking for one that you can fold the front part behind the back part. Most notebooks are too big to fit in a pocket. I thought it might be too hard to write in a notebook that doesn't fold behind. I can't tell if the notebook in this video can be folded behind... Our Dollar tree doesn't have them anymore
My late husband was very tech savvy and certainly embraced tech, but he always had a mininotebook in his pocket and a pen and used it constantly. He liked the feel of a good pen in his hands (I still have his collection of cartridge ink pens) and was quite picky about the quality of the notebook! Keep embracing writing in your notebook--you may one day write a journal, a novel, letters to your loved ones...😊💖
In my 20s, before phones, I’d carry around a little notebook everywhere. I’d be on a bus, someone would say something cool: A neat phrase, a word I didn’t know the meaning of-but sounded good, or even the name of a corner store I thought was interesting. I’d scribble it all down. Afterwards I’d leaf through and write songs based on all these little sparks. I’ve never been so prolific! Thanks for the reminder!
I currently am writing down quotes I read or hear in my notebook and this was my most recent one “The merit in all things lies in their difficulty” Found in a guide I was using to fix my printer
The thing that hit home the most is your comment that the pages have no agenda so the only agenda is your own. That's so valuable and so the notebook now becomes the thing that hold space for you or your agenda to be 'heard', that is to be born and brought forth towards realisation
I used to carry a notebook as a memory aid (I have misplaced it). It truly helps. When ever I would meet someone, I would ask for their name, and have them spell it (hearing issues) and write it in the book. The simple process of writing it down helps it go from short-term to long-term memory. This is just one of the uses.
people trying to heal from extremely traumatic events (SRA) are programmed not to be able to talk about it. But they found that if they wrote things down, then they COULD remember what happened, and "talk" about it that way. There is something about manually forming the letters to the words that forms new synapses or neural pathways in the brain, helping it to heal. Helping them to remember. Drawing or other art forms like painting may help also. I'm trying to get into nature journaling somewhat, where you just draw stuff you see in nature. And it can be a pinecone, or a houseplant, or your pet, an insect, you can draw your broccolli, the ingredients for a recipe,anything. Try drawing the same object each day for 30 days. Use different mediums, pencil, pen, crayons, markers, highlighters, paint, maybe draw it different sizes, from different angles, with light sources placed in different spots to draw the shadows. Lots of watercolor artists draw their art supplies on the first page of a sketchbook. I have always preferred books with pictures in them instead of a wall of text. Even if it's just one little image per chapter. I feel like I've always been better with written communication than I am with verbal. I just don't think fast enough to speak correctly. I need to SEE the words, edit the sentences, make sure it says what I meant to say.
Ooh same here! Hearing issues and memory issues were getting me in trouble at work, when I wrote everything down it helped me do my job. Although people made fun of me for it 😅
I have ADHD. I struggle to get my thoughts in order - pretty frequently. I have LOADS of notebooks for random things, and important things too. I love the thought of carrying one around to keep me sane when I’m not at home and don’t want to forget all of the important things. Putting my phone down now. This is awesome.
look up simple bullet journaling, it was originally for ppl with adhd who had like 20000 notebooks but none of them full and then people made it all about being pretty instead of functional. but the simple version truly changed my life, the system is amazing, its like a daily planner you make yourself page by page. i can keep track of my appointments and my thoughts and my creative writing and any workout plans or daily goals im trying to achieve all in one place
This is everyone’s hidden superpower! 3 years ago I started writing every day. At first I was shocked at my handwriting and poor spelling, because I’d not used those skills. It soon came back and my confidence grew. The physical act of writing lights up the brain way more than typing a keyboard. I’ve 2 notebooks - my “scribble” one where I get things down on paper, a “neat” one where I write the notes properly as a reference. That material comes from my brain, and writing it twice ingrains it deep. Then you discover nice pens, the fun of different ink colours (fountain pen ink is incredibly varied), and a nice pen glides across needing no pressure at all - so lessening cramps etc. And handwriting becomes an expression of who you are - it identifies you to others who recognise it, and when it comes to birthday cards or notes or letters, nothing is more significant than a nicely written thought from your own hand. My brain feels way more alive and responsive than it did 5 years ago. I work in IT, but my problem solving and thinking is done away from the computer and simply on paper - it gives me freedom and clarity. Like you, I cannot leave the house without some paper and a writing implement - doesn’t have to be fancy as you’ve shown, the key is just to start - 5mins a day is a good goal, and don’t let any rocky experience put you off, like I said I was appalled at my efforts to begin with but I kept going to now it’s a major hobby and part of my day. Top tip: if spelling a word keeps catching you out, just learn that spelling - soon you’ll have most of the common ones you use often, and you’re then on a roll!!!
Wow thank you for taking the time to share this! I really appreciate it and resonate with a lot of it. I’m just now starting to branch out to cool new pens which is a slight obsession if mine :)
ive read somwehere that writing is one way to help our critical thinking. it’s definitely like a workout for my brain bc ive been struggling while talking in english and even in my own language.
Perfectly explained. I have so many notepads and "journals." When you start getting older, you'll find yourself making notes to yourself. I actually had a young coworker come up to me, saw my "half cursive, half print," and said "You're writing is so pretty. I wish I could write like that." I asked her if she was taught cursive writing in school. She said no, they had stopped teaching it years prior. That's a low down dirty shame. Cursive is beautiful. When I write, it's mostly in cursive. It just flows quickly, where as if I had to print. It would probably resemble chicken scratch. Maybe that's a goal for me to work on. "Proper printing." 😁
You are criminally underrated. This level of cinematography, dedication, and editing is on the level of people with millions of subscribers. This is a wonderful idea, great video!
I agree. Very well done. And great content. As boomer who struggles with device dependency, I feel the younger generations need to connect with you in order to become less device dependent too.
Didnt even notice the subs until you mentioned this i thought he would have had sooo many more because his editing is sooooo good woahhh yes definitely veryyyyy underrated and so i subbed because i too now wana go get this tiny notebook and the editing is beyond great
I used to journal in physical notebooks religiously as a child; those things went EVERYWHERE with me. Then I purchased my first iPad mini, switched to electronic for convenience, and it didn’t quite have the same appeal, but I kept at it. Then college hit and I gave it up completely. You have single-handedly inspired me to take up journaling again, and in a more versatile manner. Put all those notebooks I have laying around to use.
So grateful that my search for “how to make your own handmade notebooks” for teaching my students somehow led me to this video (and the picture of your mini classic composition notebook!). I needed to hear this so much, thank you for sharing your perspective and experience. I am definitely a tactile person and have been feeling the need to get back to writing more. My phone has totally distracted me from one too many innovative thoughts.. it is so true there is no distraction with pen and paper. Great perspective shift
Dollar Tree sells packs of mini thread-bound pocket notebooks. When I was working there, I started carrying one during my shift. It's incredible that, at least back in 2016, that the notebook was allowed on the sales floor while my phone was to be kept in my locker. Was a paradigm shift for me and I have never looked back.
Handy hint - never, never buy the "glued-in" notebooks. Pages will fall out at the first humid day. Thread bound are much. Much superior. To tell the difference, look at the top or bottom, next to the "spine" of the notebook. If the pages go straight in to the "spine", they've been glued. They're trash. If the pages bend around in a tight "U" shape its almost certainly thread bound.
I work at walmart and we have an app that helps us find items (like working with a handheld/gemini/telxon) we can pull up information and find locations of an item. But I have *so much* annoying things on my phone now that the app is slooooooooooooow. So I've bought pocket notebooks (on my third) and use them at work. I actually started it because I am a grocery shopper at the store and although I knew the general area of where items were I hadn't really bothered learning the aisle location. But, once I went to the grocery shopper department I would get so many customers asked where something was. I could direct them like a southern cowboy telling you how to get back to the interstate, but it took a minute and I realized if I know the aisle locations better it would help out all of us (we're also more or less timed when shopping for customers so getting stopped can be frustrating). I started writing down the exact aisle locations (mostly in grocery which I was less familiar with). And after about two weeks I stopped needing to pull out the notebook and have been able to just answer questions "where's the water" "A 20" "Where is Peanut butter?" "Aisle A 16" "Where is frozen fish sticks?" "Aisle A 5 on the end on the left... top shelf I believe" [we recently had a remodel so notebook three has taken those new locations. And started jotting some places that move around. It's also helped to write information for customers and just pull out the sheet and give that to them]
Was bummed when I left my phone at home once. Then I got to the store and realized not a single person could get ahold of me. I went from bummed to bliss. It honestly felt liberating. And yeah man I’ve had to repeat an idea over and over in my head while I swipe away notifications on my phone. Usually I forget the idea or forget where I put it digitally. The tiny notebook eliminates that
Thank you Austin you gave me the push I desperately needed it. I deleted my Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat and TikTok account months ago, however I held on to Facebook convincing myself it was to keep in touch with friends. I often fell victim to doom scrolling, comparing myself so forth and so on. It took a toll on my mental health. I’ve always been a fan of journaling and find comfort in always having pen and paper on me. So again I thank you for reigniting something that I stopped doing because of the distraction on my cellular devices. New subscriber alert!
I use the Facebook lite messenger app, it's only the private messages, nothing else. I live on the opposite side of the world to my parents, so it's handy to stay in touch with them. I think I only look at the facebook site once every 3-4 months. And that's mainly to check in with a handful of hobby groups.
This is such a positive outcome, and so interesting that you can contrast social media and it’s mental effect to the straightforward by limitless possibilities of pen and paper! I’m excited for you as a fellow traveller- I don’t think there is a better “hobby” or practice than physical writing, it is true freedom
I dumped FB 4-years ago, my "real" friends have my phone numer 😁 we get together for face-to-face interactions - it is liberating to be free from tech!0
Just ran across this gem of a video and I'm hooked. Not just on the tiny notebook idea but your humorous, down-to-earth advice. Happy to be a new subscriber!
My Grandfather carried one like this in his shirt pocket at all times. He was always writing in it. He called it his brain, he gave me my first one and I have carried one ever since. It’s interesting just how handy these are. I love going through the handful of my grandfathers notebooks that had been put away in a old cardboard box. They were going to be thrown away so I snagged them.💕
My father loved little notebooks as well and as well as having it on him during the day kept it by his bedside to get any ideas down so he could rest easy!
why is no one talking about how great your storytelling is! aside from the idea of writing on a notebook, the art of your storytelling together with the mix of film-like plus the vlog-like visuals and how good your sounds matches the emotion of your script. you also incorporated a character with a funny humor in the story that enhances the whole experience of watching your video. No wonder I am convinced that writing on a notebook was actually good for us.
This video reminded me of a huge notebook I used to write all my story ideas in when I was ten. I filled so many pages back then, but nowadays I struggle to write a single page on my computer. I have a hard time feeling motivated. Now, I wonder what would happen if I tried going back to that notebook.. I honestly think I should try. Thanks Austin!
And your comment reminded me of mine as well! I used to have a few in high school and college. Still have them somewhere in the room. Now that you mentioned it, I have a strong urge to go find them.
Sincerely I wrote a lot as a teenager as well, on paper, and now I just physically cannot write unless it's done this way. So maybe you're onto something
I always preferred writing stories out by hand and then copying them over to the computer. It might take longer in the end, however I find it beneficial.
@@wintersprite theres smtg nice about writing, its slower than typing so it allows for your brain to catch up in a way. Its also nice because the writing makes it easier to remember
the most problematic thing I face with a notepad or pen and paper is the anxiety of filling a notebook with useless stuff. I don't think twice about filling my hard drive, but something about the limited space of paper really gets to me.
The world is imperfect and we human beings are imperfect. You have to accept that. And your thoughts, are not always going to be great one after the other. Embrace your silly thoughts and put them down on paper. You will be greatful even for that years later. I have personal notebooks from primary school and I smile with a tear on my eyes when I read the sweet nonsense I wrote back then.
Mine is losing it. Now I don't remember all the important sh I gotta get done. Or gradually buy ... Wever I need to buy. Or when I carry it w/ me & spiteful ass co workers prob go through it and try to throw it away. W/ out of course letting residents getting ahold of it. If it's not urs leave it alone. I remember sticking sticky notes everywhere in my apt in my 20s... Having guests over is like why the f is everyone so damn spiteful for? It's not bad enough ppl steal from me now you want me to feel disorderly too? And no, it's not there must be something about me then. Like how the hell do I even bug anyone. I'm sorry I try harder & u don't?!
Love this and the stories of the writer. I grew up in the 90s in Jamaica where my schools made it a requirement to carry a little notebook for remembering, journalling, diagramming, planning etc. It's now an unbreakable and very useful habit.
I always carry a notebook and pen with me, but I also always take my phone too. Last week I had to be away from home for several days and forgot my phone. I felt a bit of 'separation anxiety' initially, but eventually it became a nice break from "being connected". I filled up pages and pages with ideas, to do lists, journalling, sketches for craft projects. Feels good to get my thoughts out of my brain and on paper.
It is scary for me as a 63 year old guy seeing crowds of people walking around in the streets or sitting in cafes with their heads literally plugged into their smartphone. No-one communicates anymore in an age of communication! People are alive to the internet but dead to each other. It is refreshing to see this video speaking up for the age old art of paper writing. I will no doubt write this in my notebook! Thank you for posting - entertaining and enlightening.
I had a party for my son after he finished parachute school in college. It was my first experience with having people physically present but mentally absent at an event. It was kind of disturbing, and it felt rude. The guests clearly had a preference for being "somewhere else." Even if you dine out, you'll see people sitting at a table interacting with their phones more than they do with each other. What is really sad is that it's also normal at the family dinner table for everyone, down to the youngest members of the family, to engage with a digital device rather than each other.
@@charmc4152 you need balance in life, i use computers alot but i dont use the phone that much. The most of the time i try and sort out the sht i have to deal with in life the analog way. But its always fun to give people jump scares at times when you say hi to them. A sign of our times.
This is awesome. I'm 54 and hearing someone this young doing this and seeing these things for the first time. I constantly carried a note book everywhere I went for years. At work, camping, shopping, concerts etc... I stopped when cell phones became the standard. But about 3 or 4 years ago I started again. To do lists, idea list, grocery lists. Calander. Drawings. Notstion while in important conversation. Can't live without it now. There is something inherently different when you write things down physically, on paper with your hands. It interacts with tour brain in an entirely different way, as if you are imprinting it onto your memory. Great video, thanks!
As with many of the previous commenters, I am also older. I always have a notebook with me. Shopping lists, party plans, meeting notes, etc. They are easy to keep, never deleted, and doesn’t need charged. Plus, there is so much satisfaction in physically crossing things off of a to do list. Great video! You’ve earned a subscriber!
I've been doing this back in highschool. I recommend using a pocket-sized spiral notebook without lines. The spiral binding makes it easier to use the notebook and the lineless pages removes the restrictions set by your subconscious whenever you see lines. This allows you to lessen the clutter and write more on the notebook. It's even better if you have a pen that you could fit inside the spiral binding.
Thanks for sharing. I have ADHD which is blessing and a curse, I tend to be distracted so I am a perfect target for these industry of distraction. Each day for me, after taking this symptom serioisly and working with a psychiatrist is a battle in this war. And another youtuber (ParkNotes 's video "A Notebook to Save You from Infinite Scrolling & Boredom") gave me that idea of using a paper notebook, and actually I already made a habit of that and finished 3 A6 ones already. I take it almost everywhere and pick at the moment when subconciously want to grab a phone to entertain myself. I love that there is no boundaries, I write and scetch as I want, grocery list or some task just in the middle of a thought I am writing -- why not? I can loose them but I don't care. Anyway I might find it anyway while accasionally looking through some old entries. It is a freedom. It is a part of intentional boring myself to be more creative and self-aware in the end. Ps I beleive there is no hipocracy at all in being a youtuber and providing such "anti-distract, form your own agenda" pov because you give a starting point for re-thinking our use of tech, we definitelly need to find a balance, we passed a threshold where tech is more evil than good when you analyze it from a higher perspective. You gove people a choice not to follow this path, so please distract us for that. However, only true insight can lead you out of this behaviour, and you give a ground for that.
I’m a hybrid planner. I use my phone’s digital calendar and task apps, but also write it all in my Hobonichi Techo planner. I always have a Field Notes notebook in my pocket for quick notes, meeting notes, etc. I have to say that you have really tapped into my love for analog planning and note taking. I cannot over-exaggerate telling you how good this video was. Your take on the subject is spot on. Great job! Now, to go see what else your channel has to offer and perhaps subscribe. Seriously… this was a great video. Thanks for sharing. -Randy
I love google calendar, it helps me visualize time and space, which probably sounds weird but i have a bad habit of planning to do too much in not enough time. everything else is pen and paper. i hate doing stuff on my phone, punching tiny keys is straight up inefficient and annoying.
I spent a lot of time and money buying notebooks that were only used for a few pages. One day I only had a mini notebook around me to make a list and that made a huge difference. Obviously you can carry it everywhere, like you showed, but for me, the feeling of obligation to fill an entire large notebook was too much. The mini ones don't give me that anxiety. I also started writing from the last page of the notebook to the first page. I don't know the psychology of that but it helps tremendously! Thanks for the video!
@@AustinSchrock , I do that too 😉: I write first-to-last and last-to-first page (always dating notes, so I don't get lost), until notes meet in the middle 😊.
I love the way you expressed how your brain recalibrates when you don’t have access to a phone. You’re not subject to the whims of anyone who might want to contact you at any time of day. it is so refreshing to not be attached to my phone, but lately I’ve seen myself becoming more attached to it just because people might see it as irresponsible to not respond quickly and thus it’s now a source of distraction always having it. I’m wanting to get back to that feeling of being unplugged. Of being one person in the room who’s not on their phone and probably doesn’t even know where it is. I’ve tried so hard to get into little notebook using because it’s so cool and I think I’ll give it another try now!
This… “you are not subject to the whims of anyone who might want to contact to any time of day“ I.e. text messages. It drives me bonkers that I can get interrupted and distracted when I get a text message from friends or family. I haven’t figured out the perfect solution on how to deal with this. But I try to wait to reply to people. With some of my friends I realized the longer I wait to respond the more they will lean on somebody else for attention. And for somebody like myself who’s a people pleaser I’ve even started not replying to people at all. Does every text need a reply? No! I’m learning slowly. If you have any tips or advice on how to deal with text messages from friends and family intrude in your life please let me know. maybe I need to treat it like email or only check my text messages one time a day. My friends and family might think something has happened to me though 😅
@@jenshark4 I mean I still reply to everyone eventually. The only kind I don’t reply to are when someone just messages, “hey.” At that point they just want entertainment. But if I didn’t respond people would probably think that I hated them. I know because my best friend who has mad ADD hasn’t messaged me back in a month and I’m like, hello? Why? But anyway. 😂 little notepad purchased haha
I feel you on this. I got a new phone recently and I think I'm gonna use my old phone to access social media and avoid putting any social media apps on my new phone (with the exception of spotify and TH-cam which I use for music). I find myself spending 100s of hours doomscrolling on instagram and tiktok and beyond sending memes to friends I don't get any real pleasure from it. But I don't want to get rid of it because that is often the only time I can stay in contact with my peers. At least I can set aside a time to scroll online and not carry those distractions with me when I go out.
@@jenshark4 I get it. I became so distracted by txt message alerts that I turned them off. I check every few hours, and respond when a response is needed. And when I respond, I try to make it a thoughtful reply - not just filling air space. So far, this is working for me. I really like Austin's idea of carrying a small note book... I even have on on hand. I'm putting it in my pocket now.
I'm 53 yrs old and I've always preferred notebooks and yes, paper calendars. Still have and use them although I do use my phone too. But the feeling of paper is more pleasing to me. I had a Filofax for years and years. I carried it everywhere 😂 Great video! Greetings from Sweden 🌹
Jim rohn got me to truly understand the value of the notebook. As the years go on, and your library grows ( with your journals and other books ) you'll look back with astonishment. Again I can't express enough how carrying around journals the last 2 years has significantly improved my life and slowed down this racing brain a bit. I already have a bin full of journals like a crazy person.... i like it.
It’s wild to me that using a daily notebook isn’t a common occurrence for the younger generations, but I’m stoked to see that you have found joy in non-tech mediums! You’ll start to cherish those notebooks and you’ll find you remember what you wrote years even 10+ years later.
this is basically what i did while deployed in the navy for like 9 months and man. its one hell of a ride to look back on. its a tiny moleskine, beaten to hell, but it didnt leave my back pocket once for the entire deployment. would write random thoughts and things i needed to remember, random doodles, and everything in between. its like a time capsule that reminds me how much i am glad im not in the navy any more. its precious.
It's refreshing to see such thoughtful content. I've become weary of feeling the constant nagging pull of social media. It is nonstop as long as my phone is within sight or within reach. I recently went back to wearing a watch, using analog clocks in the house to avoid having to use my phone to check the time. I also bought a wall calendar for logging upcoming appointments and events so I can work to remember things instead of relying on my phone. This is greatly reducing my need to check what I have on my cellphone. I am also setting up a dedicated spot for it, a base like analog phones had, which helps me to treat it like more the old analog phone on a pigtail. I've been recalling how much more creative I was before getting a cellphone, how much quieter my mind was, and how good it felt to not feel its pull every waking moment. I'm someone who sits with a journal writing a couple of pages every morning, and this practice has been invaluable to me over the years. I've tried specific journals for things, like content ideas, shopping lists, etc. I tried getting notebooks for specific things, like gardening, creative idea hasn't gone well as these are now scattered around the house mocking me. But I have to say, I'm very intrigued by your idea and am going to give it a try. It's a notebook without expectations attached. I'm glad I ran onto your video today.
I actually started doing something like this during March of this year. As an artist there’s so much pressure for what i put down in notebooks or sketchbooks-i feel as though everything i write down/draw must look aesthetically pleasing right off the bat. And the fear of it “not matching the aesthetic” of what i had previously drawn or of the cover of the book, i refrain from adding anything into it. But then i bought a tiny little 3$ 200-page blank sketchbook and thought “screw it I’ll put anything i want into this, no matter how messy or pretty.” I referred to it as my raw thoughts. so many thoughts, quotes, ideas, and feelings have been poured into it, and it’s one of my favorite notebooks to this day. I still have around a hundred little pages left of it, too. Instagram has also been taking so much of my focus and energy to the point where I just deleted it, and coming across this video makes me even more eager to continue writing in that little raw book. Its quite inspiring to see your journey with your little book too :)
Welcome to the notebook club. I do enjoy the silence of paper. I appreciate you for highlighting The importance of getting to paper without the detailing features of the electronic gadgets. You clarified that "senior moments" are moments shared by all- when we forget a brilliant idea. Notebooks are wonderful space for creativity
I’m 54 and always carry my ‘junk book’. Creative ideas, lists, brain dumps, whatever. Calling it a junk book makes it feel durable, portable and totally unrelated to the internet’s corporate agenda.
I just purchased my notebook today! I am starting tomorrow with the hope of replacing my phone and feel more connected with my life. Thanks for the encouragement !
After 12 years of apps and paperless I returned to paper with bullet journaling. With your influence I have now moved to pocket using Traveler’s notebook passport size. Liberating and enabling. Thank you for the excellent video ❤
I'm 32, and I feel like I grew up in the last decade before technology REALLY took off. I still hold onto the things that feel real... paper and pen, journals, notebooks, real books with textured paper and that special book smell... no app will ever replace any of this for me. And for the same reason, all the art I create is with pen, pencil, paint and paper. Theres something subtly magical about it. Something no phone could replace. Loved this video ❤
I got a small note book for Christmas one year and I've been doing exactly what you have with your mini notebook and its so amazing. I'm 13 and its so nice to have something that doesn't distract me or something I can doodle on in class. In my opinion it is better than my phone and I've almost filled it out. I've had that notebook for almost 2 years and I love seeing other people doing the same thing, it feels so special and makes me happy I don't know why. Anyways, love this video and I hope you are doing well
After 5 years at my current job, I still get asked why I write my daily to-do lists in sketch books instead of just using Onenote that comes on our work computers. I still have to explain that I just much prefer writing by hand. Not only because I like my own handwriting, but because it feels so much better than clacking away at a keyboard. There's also the record keeping aspect of it. All my coworkers delete their notes after they complete a task, whereas my literal paper trail only gets bigger with each day. It's helped me in multiple situations when something goes wrong and we have to backtrack to the source.
Wow, this makes me feel old and disoriented….It’s hard to believe I’ve lived long enough that people are now “rediscovering” pens and notebooks, but at the same time I’m very glad they are. I’m 46 and I’ve been carrying around a little notebook like this in my purse for most of my life to jot down notes, thoughts, and general impressions of the world around me. I’ve also written by hand in a journal for most of my life. I’m a writer and I write all my first drafts by hand (then revise them on the computer). I feel more disconnected from what I’m writing when it’s on a screen. You’re so right that notebooks will never distract you like cell phones will. I feel like I’m in a constant battle with my phone to keep it from taking over my life and claiming my brain. I’m old enough to know all that has been lost with this new technology. Keep writing in that notebook!!
Yes, this is me too (I'm 40) I couldn't agree more. I feel very strange watching this because I never stopped using pen and paper, have always carried a notebook with me, written things down to clarify them before typing them up on a computer - I had no idea this was such an 'unusual' practice that people are now 'rediscovering' and 'moving back to'. I love hand-writing things. I've kept a personal journal since I was 9/10 and continue to do so (I have a dedicated cupboard with all my diaries and hand-written stories) It is such a grounding practice that I have never wanted to give up.
Relate to this 100%. And the neuroscience looking at distractedness, even with a device that's "turned off" yet within reach, is crystal clear that our devices influence us negatively in ways we don't appreciate
I don't carry a notebook with me but I definitely collect notebooks. I love the feeling of opening up a fresh new page and just writing away on it. I have so many notebooks filled with all my ideas for art projects or animations.
It is so great to see people showing an interest in using notebooks. Thank you for this video! I've been journaling since I was in 3rd grade. I'm 53. That's a lot of notebooks. Lol But it's also a lot of really cool creative thoughts, poems, doodles, stories. I've just started to transcribe some of this into my laptop. It's a smart way to save them....but somehow the end result feels a bit hollow. It's being able to hold that ancient Hello Kitty journal and see where my 9 year old self wrote my messy, purple marker confessions. Nothing fully replaces those paper memories.
I’m with ya on this one. Coming from an Office Supply Store multigenerational owning family, I grew up loving paper products and writing utensils. Was always experimenting with them. Then, the digital/electronic age invaded my life and I jumped on board. After all these years living life via a smart phone, I’m ready to get back to pen and paper. Your video inspires me to do so. Continue with your good work!
Man, I love to see that someone else also has a habit like this! I call my notebook my "commonplace book" because I put all of my thoughts into it! I really like how you said that what you write down is organic, and I guess it works the best when it grows naturally. Can't wait for future videos!
As someone who journals and writes short stories almost exclusively on paper, it was really interesting to see your point of view on this. For me writing with pen and paper comes naturally and i've always prefered it, and I never even considered that a lot of people find it hard to get into or even think it's cool!
For me I really enjoy journaling and writing on paper, but I don't often have it with me so I end up using my phone a lot. So the small size of this appeals to me.
I've been writing for about a decade and for 8 of those years I used a typewriter, but a year and a half ago I switched to fountain pens and fountain pen notebooks. My ideas have gone through the roof since I stopped using technology for writing! And like CS Lewis, if I really need to focus on what I'm writing, I use something even slower than a fountain pen...a feather quill with powdered ink, takes such a long time to dry even with an ink blotter, but it is completely worth it. There's no price on creativity. I've also found that blue ink makes me more creative, or using an ink that is similar in color to the fountain pen I'm using. My current one is a blue and silver resin...beautiful. and my ink is the J. Herbin Kyanite, a beautiful blue ink with flecks of silver in it.
I’m so happy you’re young!! And finding this out.. I have a small notebook in my purse. And dozens around my house literally. I love them… My thoughts, my lists, my journals. Just to WRITE!!!! Writing things done physically actually help you remember. Taking time todo that ,,I love my notebooks
Hey Austin! I am so glad this video is blowing up for you (for all the right reasons) and your channel is getting the recognition it deserves. I look back at your old videos and see that even tho they don't have so many views, that did not stop you for continuing the effort for creating top notch videos that actually add value to the viewer! This is the textbook example of hardwork pays off! Congratulations man!
We had green notebooks about that size when I was in the Navy. It was called a "wheel book" by some, and an "ass brain" by others. Very useful things, especially for keeping track of what you are doing and why. Long before I'd ever heard of "bullet journaling," that thing helped me keep on task and identify anything that kept me from getting the job done. I highly recommend getting yourself one.
I used to have an A5 journal notebook, and I always watched “journal with me” videos on TH-cam. They used a lot of stickers, which were really cute. The problem was, I was never satisfied with my own journal, I felt it wasn’t as aesthetic as the youtubers’. I kept buying new notebooks and a lot of stickers to meet my expectations, and while it was satisfying, it didn’t feel quite right. Then one day, I saw your video ,only used a pocket notebook and a pen. So, I bought a pocket notebook five months ago. I didn’t use any stickers I just wrote down whatever came to mind. I didn’t care about aesthetics anymore. And it changed my perspective about journaling
I’ve been carrying my commonplace journal for over a year. Everything goes in: to-do’s, favorite quotes, things my kids say that I want to remember, events and their attendees, book summaries, frustrations, family history, meal plans, and garden ideas. A smaller version might be helpful while I’m working, as the book I use is slightly larger than a mass-market paperback. Excellent video- just subscribed :)
I’ve written down (on the notes app) every single idea or cool thing I want to do in the future since my sophomore year in high school. I have ~70 locations to visit, hobbies I want to pursue, dreams I want to achieve, and items I want to get. I had a lot of trouble picking these things up randomly when they were useful (like christmas) so I decided to just write whatever I think of. I now have a good set of things I can preoccupy my life with in the future and I am very happy to do so. I also note my emotions as well and it helps me process them.
I saw this a year ago. In that time I've filled 3 notebooks with daily thoughts, to-do lists, emotions and stickers. Before I saw this video it took me ages to fill notebooks and I only had like one (out of like 20 very very pretty ones) that I finished. This is one of the rare journaling videos that actually changed how I record information
Journaling has been the foundation of my self improvement journey. Our thoughts are powerful and when we write them out it gives us the chance to dissect and organize our ideas. 💚
I love both technology AND journaling! Technology has its place, but I couldn't tell you how many times I've picked up my phone to do something and instantly got distracted!🤦🏻♀️ But if I jot down a note, I'm not distracted. And if you write something vs typing, you'll remember it better too. Great video. Glad I found you.
As a tip to younger people who haven’t habitually kept a notebook before, I would say, 1. Go for a very basic and very standard notebook. The kind you might buy in a pack from the supermarket or dollar store. You can also buy or make covers to fit them which you shift onto each new one. 2. Use the cardboard backing or cover for basic information: eg contacts (include your own) Write that kind of stuff from the back towards the front. You can write reminders from the back and (gasp!) tear them out later. 3. Make sure that the format is one that suits the lifestyle you really have: the clothes you really wear every day or the standard pockets of a backpack or purse. 4. If you don’t mind small size pens, then you can jam mini pens down the spiral or binding, or clip it across so it doesn’t add to the outline size of the book. And since these little pens tend to come in packs, you can have one in every coat or bag. A “space pen” is great because they don’t leak, break or dry up. But you have to be realistic about how reliable you are, as these are expensive to replace.
This was something that we did daily when I was in the Army Infantry (there were no cell phones, yet). I also carry pocket notebooks today, when working in aerospace or manufacturing industries. Yes, I have access to all kinds of computers, and have for most of my life (I was into computers before it was cool, yoh!) but one of the biggest lessons I learned was that the user interface is just as important as the capabilities of the system. Until smart phones developed the touchscreen interface they were only used by people desperate for the functionality of the hand-held computer systems, i.e. business and tech gurus. A quick, note taking or messaging app that is always there, can't be intercepted by IT, and just feels natural? Even in the 21st Century, there's room for pen & paper.
...Listening to this while working, Austin, you struck a chord & hit it hard. The overall video & message/reasonings are amazing & very helpful! I'm just focusing on two sentences... "Attention is one of the rarest and most valued Commodities in our world today. If you can learn how to capture someone's attention & hold it, you instantly have an opportunity that no one else has." This rings true. I had to share it with our VP & try to spread this out. What a quote... keep doing what you're doing Bro!
In the 90s used to make a lot of notes everywhere I went cause I was diagnosed with a memory problem. Even then people looked at me strange. But neuropsychologists told me that writing is very powerful with memory. 1. Writing 2. Seeing yourself write 3. Speaking what you are writing and 4. Listening to yourself speak... Uses at least 4 parts of your brain helping you to think and remember things.
Actually using all your senses (writing, seeing what you're writing, saying it aloud) are one of the best ways to learn something new-because these senses imprint it in our brain; our brain gets engaged, absorbed in it. It is related to memory -long term memory. Valid point.
I've always liked the aesthetic of pen and paper. I think the permanence of it forces you to think more. It takes longer to write, and longer to erase/correct your writings. If you want to get something done, you're forced to slow down. What I find so cool about this is that, the fact is people are capable of more than they think, but the hurriedness of society pacifies their full ability. There's nothing wrong with slowing down. Just focus.
Congratulations on the viral video Austin, just checked your videos out and it looks like you have been putting a lot of work and passion into your videos for quite awhile. It must be really rewarding for you to see this video pop like it has. 🙂
Nice to see someone as young as you can see the benefits of using a notebook. I myself use the same thing. Hello, I still use a manual typewriter. I have an electric selective and a 1946 Royal desktop that I am working on but I do have a collection of portable manual typewriters. I own about 15 of those and mostly Smith-Corona’s. From 1946 thru the 1960’s. I have a beautiful 1959 Olympia SM4. Hunter Green and works great and looks like new. I use my typewriters to write to friends and relatives. Been typing since I was 16 when I took up typing classes in my High School. Going to be 74 this coming August and just love typing. You have a good head on your shoulders. You will do fine in life. Good video.
Last year I decided to do something similar! I called it my "everything journal", and I put everything into it. Scribbles on napkins, business cards, poems, thoughts, drawings, etc. At the end of the year, I had a book full of memories and replaced it for 2023. I think I didn't realize how much of myself I poured into the journal until I went back through it on NYE.
Thanks, Austin. You hit the nail on the head with so many points. I'm a stationery nerd and LOVE notebooks. I just find that the perfectionist in me doesn't want to START writing in one for fear that I'll change what I want to use the notebook for and then I'll need to go buy another notebook. LOL. I need to get over that! ;)
That's definitely a real problem! When I bought this notepad I wrote in the front "anything and everything" to remind myself that there's no "right" or "wrong" here, just "did" or "didn't." Hope this helps!
I tend to change the purpose of my notebooks frequently, so I like spiral bound ones where its easy to just rip out the pages from the old project and then only the clean sheets are left for me to use it for something else.
In the last years of university, the tasks, appointments and duties became a little overwhelming, so I started to use a notebook as well to record all of my tasks and plans. It helped me a lot to organize my life at the time.
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Notepads are the best :)
Remember Sherlock's brother?
Dood, tha KS for the advice. I'm writing a great story and I've forgotten two good ideas because I didn't write them down.
I was able to come up with the ideas again after brain storming, but I need to wrote things down before doing anything else.
you’re*
@@polite_pigeon9995 what? Who mispelled?
there's a Korean trend/phrase for choosing tactile, "old-fashioned" things to escape our fast-paced, digital lives. You see it in the States too but it's more associated with hipsters or the cottage-core aesthetic. It's called "analog life" where people choose to listen to vinyl records, have ticking clocks, use pencil or fountain pens, read physical books, make pour over coffee, sit in a cabin and stare at the scenery or listen to the rain, go camping and cook on a fire, etc. It's basically intentionally choosing things that might take longer but enjoying the process of it and slowing down your mind, almost meditation in a way.
Interesting! I think in small ways that is really good, idk if I would go quite that far myself, but really interesting
Oh yeah. Most people don’t do everything. It’s kinda like saying “I’m going camping” but just lighting a fire pit in the backyard vs going backpacking.
For instance, your friend makes you a pour over coffee and as your listening to the water drip as they methodically use a goose neck kettle you might remark “you live such an analogue life, it’s so peaceful to make coffee this way”
Um... it's called how things have ALWAYS been until around the mid 90's or so. No one's reinventing the wheel here. "Korean trend" LOL
@@kristi1949 Well, to be fair, in NORTH Korea it's still 1955.
I actually love that! There's something about the idea of "simplification." "Returning to the past could be a wonderful way to introduce a little more peace in everyday life. I've found it very soothing to just take a day without my phone, or read a physical book instead of being on my phone
I’m a 63 year old engineer who uses electronic devices to keep my life in order. I’m super disciplined and have no issue with it. But being from the baby boomer generation I’m still attracted to paper quite often. Either using paper to make lists or picking up a paper copy of a magazine. I watched your video to see why a younger person would want to spend more time on paper. I was totally impressed by your open mindedness and stating the obvious about distraction. Keep up the good work and push the message to others. Our distractions today can be reduced by choice; just like you’re doing. Well done.
"Reduced by choice" 100%
Same age range of "boomer"... and completely agree with your comment.
Failure mode of a paper notebook vs electronic device or human memory.
bro Is a w
As an engineering student we had our electronics professor say "theoreticaly in your everyday life you should only use tools that you would be able to remake, or to make out of said tools. Otherwise, it means the tool is smarter than you" he was a wise man.
I've found that buying a cheap notebook is more valuable than an expensive one. Fancy journals make me nervous about writing something dumb or make me more concerned with making the notes look nice, rather than freely expressing the thought.
I agree whole heartedly
I actually had same feelings.
And then I bought cheapest available book from stationary market, and then I wrote with whole hearted irrespective of pen / pencil / look / kind of hand writings.
It was basically used for writing out all kinds of stuff relevant / irrelevant; kind of dump-yard for my thoughts.
I used to do burn everything at 15 days interval. I didn't do it for too long and after a year; I left it.
@lakeridgekds9598 Oh my gosh, I thought I was the only one to feel or think that about 'fancy journals'.
omg i relate to this
Ohmigosh yes! I now use a paper planner as well as my phone calender. I was afraid to use a planner because of the videos of people making the planner art. That’s not me. Mine is full of nearly illegible scrawl that says “doctor 2pm” and such. I completely get the fear of messing up a beautiful notebook or planner.
I fills my heart with joy when I see younglings discovering the pleasures of analogic life. No constant notifications, no empy batteries, no fear of having your notebook stolen for it's market value. You are the master of your time and your activities, and you control when you have contact with other people.
Until the 1990s, it was common for adults to carry with them "a little black book" or something similar in a suit pocket or handbag. That little black book had phone numbers and mailing addresses of relatives and friends, lists of things to do, appointment reminders, birthday reminders, ideas and plans, poems they wrote, hand-written recipes, etc. This was very, very common in the days before smart phones. And that little black book never needed charging to function.
Hear, hear. And some of us, gladly, still practice that :-)
Albeit that was necessary at that time ofc, phones are way better for so much but distarctions are endless. Tho when rooms start having charging function with wireless charging being super strong that will be rly cool i must say! 💪
Dude, literally.
Even in the 90s and 2000s, people had planners.
No, it just needed a writing implement, good handwriting, a light source to see it, and eventually ran out of pages even if you discarded the old pages. But it didn’t need to charge, that is true.
Acting like the technology of the past is better than the technology of today is lunacy, if it was better we’d still be using it. We stopped using those, almost universally, because the overwhelming majority can agree that smartphones are better.
Seeing a young person discover the mental peace that existed for all of us prior to smart phones is pretty neat. There is something to be said for the freedom of not being electronically tethered.
@@delightfulgenius4635 That book sounds interesting! Thanks for mentioning it. I don’t doubt for a minute that there are serious consequences to our brains. But, I’m older and really can observe the differences in myself now and 30 yrs ago. I can’t imagine what this constant and relentless “input” is doing to young minds.
I was thinking the same. Born in the 70s and have thought a lot lately about how I can "go back" to that time. I'm probably looking at it through rose-coloured glasses, but I sure remember it as a time that I was more content, worried less, and just generally enjoyed life more. I often wonder how young people must feel never having that other perspective/way of life. I guess they don't miss something they've never had.
💯💯💯💯
@ajduplahd well, his comment disappeared and I cannot remember the name of the book. I’m sorry!
I gotta be honest, and I say this as someone who uses a notepad to draw a lot. That sounds very silly.
We're not tethered to anything. Phones don't magically zap away mental peace as you call it. You know what does that? Ourselves. I use my phone to call people and take notes all the time, I'm frankly confused why this is somehow a problem.
Man I love the idea of reclaiming ourselves from the digital world. About a year ago I got tired of my Apple Watch telling me to breathe and switched to a vintage Timex. I got tired of recharging AirPods and switched back to corded headphones that work every time I need them to. I don’t say these things in a smug hipster way but to intentionally live on my terms and use my tools instead of the other way around. Thanks for this video
You bet
This! I got an Apple Watch not long ago, and immediately I was like… this feels wrong, having my phone tied to me physically
I also despised going to use my AirPods, only to find they weren’t charged… I bought a 12$ set of over the ear headphones and much prefer them never needing to be charged
This is exactly the mindset that led me to dump having a cell phone over 20 years ago.
I've never bought into smart watches, if you're super into fitness then just get a fitbit or something I guess, but I definitely don't need a less useful harder to use version of my phone strapped to my wrist, sometimes I don't want to see notifications etc so I just put my phone on silent and flip it over, I feel like a smart watch is just another way of making you hooked to every little alert that goes off
I’m tired of my Apple Watch, too. I now wear my $15 Casio watch and LOVE it.
As an artist, my physical sketchbook is irreplaceable! Not just for my creative growth but also for my emotional health! Plus I can’t tell you how many ideas I’ve forgotten about writing down but getting to reread forgotten ideas is always a fun surprise!
As a quotest I just write bs... That somexs I forget them. I write my own inspiring things pshhh ohmm
I love this video. The "have you ever opened your phone to do something specific and got distracted" bit resonated strongly with me. Attention hijacking is so real.
Another positive for the notebook over the phone is that upgrades and replacements are so much cheaper, and no contract or hidden fees! Seriously, good stuff.
The google search feature bugs me, how they now have a feed of articles they think you’ll be interested in. Guaranteed distraction! Fortunately there’s a widget that goes straight to the search bar and blocks the suggestions
100% yes
Attn hijacking, I like that although I currently refer to it as side-trackery. 80% of my work day is just that.
So everytime im being pulled off my own tasks then I use paper notes or NotePad if on the PC.
It seems very much like the digital equivalent of the doorway effect. (For context, from Wikipedia: “The 'doorway effect' or 'location updating effect' is a replicable psychological phenomenon characterized by short-term memory loss when passing through a doorway or moving from one location to another. We tend to forget items of recent significance immediately after crossing a boundary and often forget what we were thinking about or planning on doing upon entering a different room. Research suggests that this phenomenon occurs both at literal boundaries (e.g., moving from one room to another via a door) and metaphorical boundaries (e.g., imagining traversing a doorway, or even when moving from one desktop window to another on a computer).”) So while apps demanding our attention is certainly one piece of the puzzle, blaming it specifically on technology might be missing the underlying foundation of what’s happening. Just an observation, though.
The pride and satisfaction that comes from seeing your old journals, sitting there full of memories all together, it just can't be matched. I have 5 used journals my current one for the last 7 years or so, and seeing them all together is amazing.
Agreed
What if someone or you family sees them?
I have a few I think like 5 or 6 now but they are all just blueprints, comics, work, or random doodles but this next one I'm gonna at least attempt to take detailed notes
@@sl4983Oh no! I wouldn’t want my family and friends seeing that I have *gasp* A HOBBY!
@@voxelbandit I think they meant like if you had written anything really personal in the journal that you'd be embarrassed for someone else to read
You just cannot beat the feeling of a paper and the tactile learning when you write something out. My memory is better when I engage as many senses as I can into my learning (paper books, pen writing etc). I’m such a paper/pen kinda gal and people jokingly call me a grandma for it. I’m in my 20s lol
Btw I think you sincerely deserve more subscribers; this is quality content and editing 🙌🏽
Thanks for the feedback! I appreciate you sharing your experience with the tactile :)
Well then, young lady, you are wise for your years. Of course, one can tell who is experienced in writing, by their grammar, alone. I definitely appreciate writers, and tolerate commenters. Sometimes, its so hard to even decipher the very thought processes they're trying to convey, because its one, long, run-on sentence. Usually full of googly-moogly, anyway.
I always draw my comics on paper, with pencils and ink. I got a screen tablet for digital colouring, but might just go back to alcohol markers (helps that they can be had dirt cheap in Japan).
I letter digitally, though. Nobody can read my scribble, I know my limits!
Same. I collect notebooks. I love writing by hand. Typing is a big no
Thank you for saying "...it couldn't care less." It makes me crazy when people incorrectly say "...could..."
I love this! I've been using a paper planner, commonplace book, and journal for years and I wouldn't trade those for anything. For me, I love the ability to just pick up my journal and see a thought or a photo or a memory without swiping or having to make sure my battery isn't too low, etc.
You're so right about being "present" when you don't have your phone. It's a precious gift to have that time.
It really is
It's also so nice he didn't swear! It's gotten so bad that I have to always brace myself for hearing bad language every time I start to watch a video. So infuriating.
I agree completely. My grandmother, who journaled for many decades, inspired me to start journaling in 1983. Needless to say, I’ve considered many reasons to write with my pen in hand (or pencil). Great video, well projected! Thank you.
Glad you enjoyed!
Using a notepad is one of the best medium to focus your thoughts!
Great video! 👏
Oh? Because a computer or phone couldn't do the same thing?
why do I see you everywhere... I like 3D printing but why are you in all of my favorite youtuber's comment sections...
wow i see your comment and you have checkmark. you are big channel, i click on your channel without finishing this video and sub to you instead
Can"t do facebook
@@darrylkinslow5613 🤨 you even watched 5 sec of the video?
I struggle with ADHD and anxiety. Writing in a notebook has fundamentally changed how I process my emotions and Ideas. Or just my thoughts general. I guess you could say it changed my life in some way? Anyways, I think the biggest advantage that comes from writing, is simply the amount of time it takes to write something down. Within the amount of time it takes to write down a thought or idea, you get time to refine and focus your train of thought. It really helps me slow down, and most of the time (if not every time) I gain new insight that I hadn't previously observed. Also, keep it up! It's obvious you put a lot of effort into your videos and it shows! Can't wait for what's next!
Thanks for sharing, I appreciate the feedback!
Hi @strom , would you be able to give an example of what you would write down? Are they reminders?
Good for you! I have been doing the same. It's helped me with the same issues.
I have ADHD and use a notebook to write down all the random things that pop into my head as I’m trying to complete a task. Example: One day I was working on a report and suddenly thought “What’s the name of that island were all the rich people used to vacation and the a volcano erupted and wiped out half the island?” ADD people will understand how this happens. So instead of going down the internet rabbit hole where I look up one thing that leads to another and on and on until an hour has gone by wasted on random nonsense. So I keep a notepad next to me and when a random thought pops into my mind, I write “That island destroyed by a volcano” and go back to my task, and once I’m finished with the things I need to do, I can look up all the random stuff I wrote down. Half the time it’s no longer of interest and I can move on to other things. It really helps keep me on task.
@@tangyjoe4326 I like that tip. I can get so lost trying to look up what I was trying to remember. Geography for 500. What is Montserrat?
Thank you so much for showing me this! I decided to try it. I had the goal of carrying it everywhere for a month. I've been carrying a little notebook everywhere for almost 2 weeks now. I absolutely love it. I have it jam packed with content. Journal entries, little drawings, appointments, comics, shower thoughts, even random garbage for the sake of random garbage. I numbered the pages, and added a table of contents for quick reference to important pages. It's organized chaos and it's my own little slice of heaven. Once it's full I'm gonna buy another one. Again, thank you so much for showing me this!
So glad to hear this! Thanks for updating us
I'm a college student and I've found that taking actual, physical notes and drawings of things on pen and paper is vital to my absorption and memorization of my class content. Yes, it takes much longer to write on paper than to simply type, but that's kind of the point. It makes me focus more on what I'm reading. I really don't study much outside of my normal note taking and I find I don't need to mostly because of this technique.
Agreed
I totally agree, the only difference for me is I use an iPad for all my notes because I write A LOT and have a lot of technical drawing I have to do so the iPad just saves a lot of space in my bag but I’ve started to notice a difference in people who write notes vs type
How do you manage to write as the professor is talking?
@@NotChronos there's almost always a PowerPoint to go along with the lecture.
@@NotChronos you don't need to write every word said. The most important thing is listening to the professor and being able to summarize it. It can sounds hard to do in real time, but not really, it's a matter of practice :)
You touched on something that I have been thinking about for a while and I think I'm going to start running with it. Before smart phones I used to write "my brain" in a little book I carried in my back pocket. I can't remember the last time my mind felt collected. I'm going to dive into this. Thank you.
I’ll join you!
Worth a try. I was surprised at how many fans paper and pens have!
Do you guys have updates?
No way!!! When I was in high school and university I had something similar and I called it my “brain book” as well!!! I’m drawn more and more to try it again!
Not a "brain notebook", but I also kept a notebook I used to pour my emotions and thoughts into. I don't do this regularly, but I think that this thread is motivating me to do this more. Love you guys
I remember back in 2006 when my sister was in college and I would visit her, students didn't really have smart phones. I carried a notebook with me at a party and was writing down rules to drinking games and a guy asked me.
"Why are you carrying a notebook with you?"
To which I responded
"Dude we are in college."
He nodded in agreement.
Nowadays it would be, "dude we can take notes on our phones."
🤣
That is the most casual and accepted interaction I've ever seen 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Yeah. NGL, using my phone or having to use it often for online school sorta messed me up. My brain is mush now. It's aching as we speak.
@@brinettevalorie4554how did it mess u up? As long as you have social media apps deleted I don’t think you would have a problem with it. And minimal apps. The only social media I got is TH-cam
I have always done this, so it surprises me that it is new to people. I love notebooks and lists.
It’s good to note how well of a speaker and presenter you are actually. In fact, I didn’t see myself losing my attention to anything because you structured the video, and your words so well to where I didn’t WANT to get distracted.
Well done!
Lol he planned and rehearsed this. No one does such a good job at this type of task so well just on the fly.
@@scottgould6590 exactly right
How fitting with the topic of the video lol
Jesus Christ loves you ❤
I mean, it dragged at the end. He stretched it out way too much. And the gaps in the music made the music in itself distracting. Nice concept and video. I wonder if he planned this out in his notebook or on his phone.
As a 16 year old who just started carrying around a little notebook like this one about a week ago it was very cool to find this video and see others come to the same conclusion I did about a week ago. Planners never worked for me because they were too big and felt too important but this little notebook feels just informal enough for me to use it. I’m starting school tomorrow with a to-do list already written on my most recent page so I can keep track of all the stuff I need to do all without having to deal with the strict phone policy of my school. Wish me luck! :D
I can relate, the fact that it's inexpensive is the main part that I like.
@Azu10157 I don’t use it as creative writing but more “hey this is cool” stuff. Maybe some doodles one day, if I come up with any cool ideas I might write them down, things to remember (I have bad memory lol), funny things I hear that I want to bring up with one of my friends or something, loadouts for a video game, literally whatever. If I would write it down on my notes app on my phone regularly, instead I’ll write it here. It doesn’t need to have any meaning, heck its only a dollar no need to write my life’s story in there. Heck, I rarely write anything about myself in there, it’s just for extra convenience without a phone, no deeper meaning
@Azu10157 I also have a little notebook I carry in my pocket at all times, and I write everything and anything, literally. It's mainly to do lists to keep me focused (breaking things down into small tasks really help my procrastinating ass), random thoughts and ideas (I often write on it when a class is making me bored or sleepy just to vent), notes about games I play, drawings, and sometimes I like to journal a bit since I date these notebooks and go back through them every once in a while for nostalgia. And by journal I just mean "went to a football game for the first time, that was cool" kind of stuff. Word vomiting can be very therapeutic, and you are more likely to remember things you write down, so I just write anything that comes to mind. The most important things are: notebooks are meant to be used, get a cheap one so you don't feel guilty about using it and just abuse it; don't force yourself to write or it becomes a chore rather than something for you. Try to have it on you or close to you at all times so you look at it and feel compelled to write. And take your time, I have notebooks that were finished in a month, some in a few months, some took a few years. No one else is gonna read it, so just enjoy it for yourself
When I’m trapped in a place (meetings, presentations, talks) and can’t really take out my phone without being rude I find scrawling my frustrations helps me not to scream.. I’m adhd and struggle all the time to find tools that keep me organized without overwhelming me with too much detail
I found some 3-month daily planners a couple years ago that are about the size of a phone, and they helped me so much while I was in school! Then I found out my university gave out free ones that were a fair bit bigger but had the whole school year and were completely free (they were for the freshmen each year, but I just visited the first year experience office a couple weeks into fall semester when they were desperate to get rid of them), so I switched to those. I would assign myself specific homework items to each day of the week so I could balance my work throughout the week and know I didn’t have to worry about x assignment until the next day.
This is why I like real books as opposed to e-books. Of course, I'm older and grew up before the computer age. About a year or more ago, I dumped Social Media. It was too distracting and very addictive. I'm definitely better off. I also started writing a journal and that's been a good thing for me. Stay the course you've plotted young man. It's much better and healthier for you.
Thanks for the encouragement, I’ll keep it in mind!
@@kleyayarizba Agreed. I have a Kindle and the Kindle ap on my iPad. I have books on there that I couldn't afford to get the real version of as they're rare or out of print. So in that respect, ebooks are handy.
As much as I love books, the weight of a physical one is getting too much on my hands, so I'm seriously considering swapping to an ebook :'(
I am in the same boat. Phones were attached to the wall, books were physical things, we talked face to face with each other. I love books, especially old books. I do have a Nook and lots of e-books, but there are some books that are not suited to being electronic. I have a book on hat making and on fabric manipulation. Those don't work as an e-book. I am happy to see this 'new' trend of putting phones down and actually thinking things out.
@@kleyayarizba It is helpful to get a feel for the book before buying a hard copy sometimes. I tend to do that with audio books.
why is no one talking about how great your storytelling is! aside from the idea of writing on a notebook, the art of your storytelling together with the mix of film-like plus the vlog-like visuals and how good your sounds matches the emotion of your script. you also incorporated a character with a funny humor in the story that enhances the whole experience of watching your video. No wonder I am convinced that writing on a notebook was actually good for us.
Thanks for the feedback!
As someone with ADHD, carrying a small note pad and pen in my pocket at all times has completely changed my life.I can keep to do lists, make quick notes of things to remember and really helps me get stuff done all day.
I was going to make this same comment!!! I realized that I waste time everyday yet I rarely use social media, don't watch tv or like shows, (just an occasional movie when invited), don't play video games or apps, not on youtube much (believe it or not lol) or even read much like I always say I want to. Yet somehow I get distracted on my phone?? I waste so much time everyday writing lists or looking up things related to my random and intrusive thoughts and getting lost in them 😂 I can't focus on tasks because I feel like I have to do something before I forget or while I have the urge. Now I write them down so I can forget about them in the moment and if they're that important I'll go back to them!
This is cool cuz i recently learned i have adhd lol
Same same, friend!
To me it's the fact that pen and paper seldom run out of battery, and most of all, cannot connect to the internet.
What notebook do you recommend? I am looking for one that you can fold the front part behind the back part. Most notebooks are too big to fit in a pocket. I thought it might be too hard to write in a notebook that doesn't fold behind.
I can't tell if the notebook in this video can be folded behind... Our Dollar tree doesn't have them anymore
A REAL ADHD person would lose the note pad by day 2
My late husband was very tech savvy and certainly embraced tech, but he always had a mininotebook in his pocket and a pen and used it constantly. He liked the feel of a good pen in his hands (I still have his collection of cartridge ink pens) and was quite picky about the quality of the notebook! Keep embracing writing in your notebook--you may one day write a journal, a novel, letters to your loved ones...😊💖
In my 20s, before phones, I’d carry around a little notebook everywhere. I’d be on a bus, someone would say something cool: A neat phrase, a word I didn’t know the meaning of-but sounded good, or even the name of a corner store I thought was interesting. I’d scribble it all down. Afterwards I’d leaf through and write songs based on all these little sparks. I’ve never been so prolific! Thanks for the reminder!
Glad you enjoyed!
I currently am writing down quotes I read or hear in my notebook and this was my most recent one
“The merit in all things lies in their difficulty”
Found in a guide I was using to fix my printer
You are not old enough to remember the "before phones" era.
The thing that hit home the most is your comment that the pages have no agenda so the only agenda is your own. That's so valuable and so the notebook now becomes the thing that hold space for you or your agenda to be 'heard', that is to be born and brought forth towards realisation
I used to carry a notebook as a memory aid (I have misplaced it). It truly helps. When ever I would meet someone, I would ask for their name, and have them spell it (hearing issues) and write it in the book. The simple process of writing it down helps it go from short-term to long-term memory. This is just one of the uses.
I agree! Very good points
people trying to heal from extremely traumatic events (SRA) are programmed not to be able to talk about it. But they found that if they wrote things down, then they COULD remember what happened, and "talk" about it that way. There is something about manually forming the letters to the words that forms new synapses or neural pathways in the brain, helping it to heal. Helping them to remember. Drawing or other art forms like painting may help also. I'm trying to get into nature journaling somewhat, where you just draw stuff you see in nature. And it can be a pinecone, or a houseplant, or your pet, an insect, you can draw your broccolli, the ingredients for a recipe,anything. Try drawing the same object each day for 30 days. Use different mediums, pencil, pen, crayons, markers, highlighters, paint, maybe draw it different sizes, from different angles, with light sources placed in different spots to draw the shadows. Lots of watercolor artists draw their art supplies on the first page of a sketchbook. I have always preferred books with pictures in them instead of a wall of text. Even if it's just one little image per chapter.
I feel like I've always been better with written communication than I am with verbal. I just don't think fast enough to speak correctly. I need to SEE the words, edit the sentences, make sure it says what I meant to say.
Ooh same here! Hearing issues and memory issues were getting me in trouble at work, when I wrote everything down it helped me do my job. Although people made fun of me for it 😅
Sounds like you needed a notebook to remember where you put your notebook.
Great memory, misplacing your book. Should've kept a second book with instructions on how to find your first book
I have ADHD. I struggle to get my thoughts in order - pretty frequently. I have LOADS of notebooks for random things, and important things too. I love the thought of carrying one around to keep me sane when I’m not at home and don’t want to forget all of the important things. Putting my phone down now. This is awesome.
look up simple bullet journaling, it was originally for ppl with adhd who had like 20000 notebooks but none of them full and then people made it all about being pretty instead of functional. but the simple version truly changed my life, the system is amazing, its like a daily planner you make yourself page by page. i can keep track of my appointments and my thoughts and my creative writing and any workout plans or daily goals im trying to achieve all in one place
This is everyone’s hidden superpower! 3 years ago I started writing every day. At first I was shocked at my handwriting and poor spelling, because I’d not used those skills. It soon came back and my confidence grew. The physical act of writing lights up the brain way more than typing a keyboard. I’ve 2 notebooks - my “scribble” one where I get things down on paper, a “neat” one where I write the notes properly as a reference. That material comes from my brain, and writing it twice ingrains it deep.
Then you discover nice pens, the fun of different ink colours (fountain pen ink is incredibly varied), and a nice pen glides across needing no pressure at all - so lessening cramps etc.
And handwriting becomes an expression of who you are - it identifies you to others who recognise it, and when it comes to birthday cards or notes or letters, nothing is more significant than a nicely written thought from your own hand.
My brain feels way more alive and responsive than it did 5 years ago. I work in IT, but my problem solving and thinking is done away from the computer and simply on paper - it gives me freedom and clarity.
Like you, I cannot leave the house without some paper and a writing implement - doesn’t have to be fancy as you’ve shown, the key is just to start - 5mins a day is a good goal, and don’t let any rocky experience put you off, like I said I was appalled at my efforts to begin with but I kept going to now it’s a major hobby and part of my day. Top tip: if spelling a word keeps catching you out, just learn that spelling - soon you’ll have most of the common ones you use often, and you’re then on a roll!!!
Wow thank you for taking the time to share this! I really appreciate it and resonate with a lot of it. I’m just now starting to branch out to cool new pens which is a slight obsession if mine :)
I love your concept of writing it twice!
How old are you ?
ive read somwehere that writing is one way to help our critical thinking. it’s definitely like a workout for my brain bc ive been struggling while talking in english and even in my own language.
Perfectly explained. I have so many notepads and "journals." When you start getting older, you'll find yourself making notes to yourself. I actually had a young coworker come up to me, saw my "half cursive, half print," and said "You're writing is so pretty. I wish I could write like that." I asked her if she was taught cursive writing in school. She said no, they had stopped teaching it years prior. That's a low down dirty shame. Cursive is beautiful. When I write, it's mostly in cursive. It just flows quickly, where as if I had to print. It would probably resemble chicken scratch. Maybe that's a goal for me to work on. "Proper printing." 😁
Hi Austin! Glad we could help contribute to improving your life. We love this simple but practical tip!
Thanks!
As a 43 year old woman who loves to notebook and journal I am so happy to see things come full circle for the younger generation. Keep it going guys!
You are criminally underrated. This level of cinematography, dedication, and editing is on the level of people with millions of subscribers. This is a wonderful idea, great video!
Thank you! Maybe one day
Yes!
I agree. Very well done. And great content. As boomer who struggles with device dependency, I feel the younger generations need to connect with you in order to become less device dependent too.
Didnt even notice the subs until you mentioned this i thought he would have had sooo many more because his editing is sooooo good woahhh yes definitely veryyyyy underrated and so i subbed because i too now wana go get this tiny notebook and the editing is beyond great
This feels like a Casey video edited my mark rober
I used to journal in physical notebooks religiously as a child; those things went EVERYWHERE with me. Then I purchased my first iPad mini, switched to electronic for convenience, and it didn’t quite have the same appeal, but I kept at it. Then college hit and I gave it up completely. You have single-handedly inspired me to take up journaling again, and in a more versatile manner. Put all those notebooks I have laying around to use.
Glad to hear it!
So grateful that my search for “how to make your own handmade notebooks” for teaching my students somehow led me to this video (and the picture of your mini classic composition notebook!). I needed to hear this so much, thank you for sharing your perspective and experience. I am definitely a tactile person and have been feeling the need to get back to writing more. My phone has totally distracted me from one too many innovative thoughts.. it is so true there is no distraction with pen and paper. Great perspective shift
Dollar Tree sells packs of mini thread-bound pocket notebooks. When I was working there, I started carrying one during my shift. It's incredible that, at least back in 2016, that the notebook was allowed on the sales floor while my phone was to be kept in my locker. Was a paradigm shift for me and I have never looked back.
That's awesome, thanks for commenting
Handy hint - never, never buy the "glued-in" notebooks. Pages will fall out at the first humid day. Thread bound are much. Much superior.
To tell the difference, look at the top or bottom, next to the "spine" of the notebook.
If the pages go straight in to the "spine", they've been glued. They're trash.
If the pages bend around in a tight "U" shape its almost certainly thread bound.
I work at walmart and we have an app that helps us find items (like working with a handheld/gemini/telxon) we can pull up information and find locations of an item.
But I have *so much* annoying things on my phone now that the app is slooooooooooooow. So I've bought pocket notebooks (on my third) and use them at work.
I actually started it because I am a grocery shopper at the store and although I knew the general area of where items were I hadn't really bothered learning the aisle location. But, once I went to the grocery shopper department I would get so many customers asked where something was. I could direct them like a southern cowboy telling you how to get back to the interstate, but it took a minute and I realized if I know the aisle locations better it would help out all of us (we're also more or less timed when shopping for customers so getting stopped can be frustrating).
I started writing down the exact aisle locations (mostly in grocery which I was less familiar with). And after about two weeks I stopped needing to pull out the notebook and have been able to just answer questions "where's the water" "A 20" "Where is Peanut butter?" "Aisle A 16" "Where is frozen fish sticks?" "Aisle A 5 on the end on the left... top shelf I believe"
[we recently had a remodel so notebook three has taken those new locations. And started jotting some places that move around. It's also helped to write information for customers and just pull out the sheet and give that to them]
I'd say that would be a wholesome fix for me. I don't even wanna use my phone on a work floor but I do need to write down my thoughts
@@mikesharkey2010 Very important pro-tip. Thread-bound or bust.
Was bummed when I left my phone at home once. Then I got to the store and realized not a single person could get ahold of me. I went from bummed to bliss. It honestly felt liberating.
And yeah man I’ve had to repeat an idea over and over in my head while I swipe away notifications on my phone. Usually I forget the idea or forget where I put it digitally. The tiny notebook eliminates that
That's awesome, thanks for commenting
Thank you Austin you gave me the push I desperately needed it. I deleted my Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat and TikTok account months ago, however I held on to Facebook convincing myself it was to keep in touch with friends. I often fell victim to doom scrolling, comparing myself so forth and so on. It took a toll on my mental health. I’ve always been a fan of journaling and find comfort in always having pen and paper on me. So again I thank you for reigniting something that I stopped doing because of the distraction on my cellular devices. New subscriber alert!
Happy to help! Thanks for the feedback, I appreciate it
I use the Facebook lite messenger app, it's only the private messages, nothing else. I live on the opposite side of the world to my parents, so it's handy to stay in touch with them. I think I only look at the facebook site once every 3-4 months. And that's mainly to check in with a handful of hobby groups.
This is such a positive outcome, and so interesting that you can contrast social media and it’s mental effect to the straightforward by limitless possibilities of pen and paper! I’m excited for you as a fellow traveller- I don’t think there is a better “hobby” or practice than physical writing, it is true freedom
I always say "Whoever found a REAL friend on Facebook?". Think about it...
I dumped FB 4-years ago, my "real" friends have my phone numer 😁 we get together for face-to-face interactions - it is liberating to be free from tech!0
Just ran across this gem of a video and I'm hooked. Not just on the tiny notebook idea but your humorous, down-to-earth advice. Happy to be a new subscriber!
Thanks for the feedback!
My Grandfather carried one like this in his shirt pocket at all times. He was always writing in it. He called it his brain, he gave me my first one and I have carried one ever since. It’s interesting just how handy these are. I love going through the handful of my grandfathers notebooks that had been put away in a old cardboard box. They were going to be thrown away so I snagged them.💕
Wow i really like this! Thanks for sharing
You saving your grandpa's notebooks made me smile big ☺️ beautiful.
@@ColleenGraceonline They are my treasures, his wisdom and sometimes funny memos bring me joy.
My father loved little notebooks as well and as well as having it on him during the day kept it by his bedside to get any ideas down so he could rest easy!
He called it his brain ….love it ….you are blessed 😊
why is no one talking about how great your storytelling is! aside from the idea of writing on a notebook, the art of your storytelling together with the mix of film-like plus the vlog-like visuals and how good your sounds matches the emotion of your script. you also incorporated a character with a funny humor in the story that enhances the whole experience of watching your video. No wonder I am convinced that writing on a notebook was actually good for us.
Thanks for the feedback!
Agreed, on your storytelling! You are a natural at this!
yeah. I feel like this is the most obvious thing, but the way you’re speaking on it is absolutely enticing.
This video reminded me of a huge notebook I used to write all my story ideas in when I was ten. I filled so many pages back then, but nowadays I struggle to write a single page on my computer. I have a hard time feeling motivated. Now, I wonder what would happen if I tried going back to that notebook.. I honestly think I should try. Thanks Austin!
And your comment reminded me of mine as well! I used to have a few in high school and college. Still have them somewhere in the room. Now that you mentioned it, I have a strong urge to go find them.
Sincerely I wrote a lot as a teenager as well, on paper, and now I just physically cannot write unless it's done this way. So maybe you're onto something
I always preferred writing stories out by hand and then copying them over to the computer. It might take longer in the end, however I find it beneficial.
Nicky did you try it?
@@wintersprite theres smtg nice about writing, its slower than typing so it allows for your brain to catch up in a way. Its also nice because the writing makes it easier to remember
the most problematic thing I face with a notepad or pen and paper is the anxiety of filling a notebook with useless stuff.
I don't think twice about filling my hard drive, but something about the limited space of paper really gets to me.
I feel that as well. For some reason it helps that the notebook is so inexpensive. Like I don’t need to fill it with something perfect
The world is imperfect and we human beings are imperfect. You have to accept that. And your thoughts, are not always going to be great one after the other. Embrace your silly thoughts and put them down on paper. You will be greatful even for that years later. I have personal notebooks from primary school and I smile with a tear on my eyes when I read the sweet nonsense I wrote back then.
Mine is losing it. Now I don't remember all the important sh I gotta get done. Or gradually buy ... Wever I need to buy. Or when I carry it w/ me & spiteful ass co workers prob go through it and try to throw it away. W/ out of course letting residents getting ahold of it. If it's not urs leave it alone. I remember sticking sticky notes everywhere in my apt in my 20s... Having guests over is like why the f is everyone so damn spiteful for? It's not bad enough ppl steal from me now you want me to feel disorderly too? And no, it's not there must be something about me then. Like how the hell do I even bug anyone. I'm sorry I try harder & u don't?!
Love this and the stories of the writer. I grew up in the 90s in Jamaica where my schools made it a requirement to carry a little notebook for remembering, journalling, diagramming, planning etc. It's now an unbreakable and very useful habit.
I always carry a notebook and pen with me, but I also always take my phone too. Last week I had to be away from home for several days and forgot my phone. I felt a bit of 'separation anxiety' initially, but eventually it became a nice break from "being connected". I filled up pages and pages with ideas, to do lists, journalling, sketches for craft projects. Feels good to get my thoughts out of my brain and on paper.
It is scary for me as a 63 year old guy seeing crowds of people walking around in the streets or sitting in cafes with their heads literally plugged into their smartphone. No-one communicates anymore in an age of communication! People are alive to the internet but dead to each other.
It is refreshing to see this video speaking up for the age old art of paper writing.
I will no doubt write this in my notebook! Thank you for posting - entertaining and enlightening.
You’re welcome!
"Alive to the internet but dead to each other" is a fantastic framing.
try and say hi to random people and notice how they get jumpscares from someone talking to them ;)
I had a party for my son after he finished parachute school in college. It was my first experience with having people physically present but mentally absent at an event. It was kind of disturbing, and it felt rude. The guests clearly had a preference for being "somewhere else." Even if you dine out, you'll see people sitting at a table interacting with their phones more than they do with each other. What is really sad is that it's also normal at the family dinner table for everyone, down to the youngest members of the family, to engage with a digital device rather than each other.
@@charmc4152 you need balance in life, i use computers alot but i dont use the phone that much. The most of the time i try and sort out the sht i have to deal with in life the analog way.
But its always fun to give people jump scares at times when you say hi to them. A sign of our times.
i love your 'i really really wanted this to be me' line - it has such a strong resonance.
This is awesome. I'm 54 and hearing someone this young doing this and seeing these things for the first time. I constantly carried a note book everywhere I went for years. At work, camping, shopping, concerts etc... I stopped when cell phones became the standard. But about 3 or 4 years ago I started again. To do lists, idea list, grocery lists. Calander. Drawings. Notstion while in important conversation. Can't live without it now.
There is something inherently different when you write things down physically, on paper with your hands. It interacts with tour brain in an entirely different way, as if you are imprinting it onto your memory.
Great video, thanks!
As with many of the previous commenters, I am also older. I always have a notebook with me. Shopping lists, party plans, meeting notes, etc. They are easy to keep, never deleted, and doesn’t need charged. Plus, there is so much satisfaction in physically crossing things off of a to do list.
Great video! You’ve earned a subscriber!
I agree, there is a lot of satisfaction with the physical notebook and pen
I've been doing this back in highschool. I recommend using a pocket-sized spiral notebook without lines.
The spiral binding makes it easier to use the notebook and the lineless pages removes the restrictions set by your subconscious whenever you see lines. This allows you to lessen the clutter and write more on the notebook. It's even better if you have a pen that you could fit inside the spiral binding.
Thanks for sharing. I have ADHD which is blessing and a curse, I tend to be distracted so I am a perfect target for these industry of distraction. Each day for me, after taking this symptom serioisly and working with a psychiatrist is a battle in this war. And another youtuber (ParkNotes 's video "A Notebook to Save You from Infinite Scrolling & Boredom") gave me that idea of using a paper notebook, and actually I already made a habit of that and finished 3 A6 ones already. I take it almost everywhere and pick at the moment when subconciously want to grab a phone to entertain myself. I love that there is no boundaries, I write and scetch as I want, grocery list or some task just in the middle of a thought I am writing -- why not? I can loose them but I don't care. Anyway I might find it anyway while accasionally looking through some old entries. It is a freedom. It is a part of intentional boring myself to be more creative and self-aware in the end.
Ps I beleive there is no hipocracy at all in being a youtuber and providing such "anti-distract, form your own agenda" pov because you give a starting point for re-thinking our use of tech, we definitelly need to find a balance, we passed a threshold where tech is more evil than good when you analyze it from a higher perspective. You gove people a choice not to follow this path, so please distract us for that. However, only true insight can lead you out of this behaviour, and you give a ground for that.
Thanks for sharing
I’m a hybrid planner. I use my phone’s digital calendar and task apps, but also write it all in my Hobonichi Techo planner. I always have a Field Notes notebook in my pocket for quick notes, meeting notes, etc.
I have to say that you have really tapped into my love for analog planning and note taking. I cannot over-exaggerate telling you how good this video was. Your take on the subject is spot on. Great job!
Now, to go see what else your channel has to offer and perhaps subscribe.
Seriously… this was a great video. Thanks for sharing.
-Randy
Hey Randy, thanks for the kind words. I'm glad I'm not the only one who loves this :)
I love google calendar, it helps me visualize time and space, which probably sounds weird but i have a bad habit of planning to do too much in not enough time. everything else is pen and paper. i hate doing stuff on my phone, punching tiny keys is straight up inefficient and annoying.
I spent a lot of time and money buying notebooks that were only used for a few pages. One day I only had a mini notebook around me to make a list and that made a huge difference. Obviously you can carry it everywhere, like you showed, but for me, the feeling of obligation to fill an entire large notebook was too much. The mini ones don't give me that anxiety. I also started writing from the last page of the notebook to the first page. I don't know the psychology of that but it helps tremendously! Thanks for the video!
Interesting, what made you start on the last page? I should try that
I have had what I call my Colombo notebook…my first was probably a vintage one purchased at an estate sale.
Do you man from right to left?
This is how half the world scripts. It's more natural
@@AustinSchrock , I do that too 😉: I write first-to-last and last-to-first page (always dating notes, so I don't get lost), until notes meet in the middle 😊.
@@leanaaymorejacob1211 What's the advantage to that? Two streams of thoughts?
I love the way you expressed how your brain recalibrates when you don’t have access to a phone. You’re not subject to the whims of anyone who might want to contact you at any time of day. it is so refreshing to not be attached to my phone, but lately I’ve seen myself becoming more attached to it just because people might see it as irresponsible to not respond quickly and thus it’s now a source of distraction always having it.
I’m wanting to get back to that feeling of being unplugged. Of being one person in the room who’s not on their phone and probably doesn’t even know where it is. I’ve tried so hard to get into little notebook using because it’s so cool and I think I’ll give it another try now!
This… “you are not subject to the whims of anyone who might want to contact to any time of day“ I.e. text messages. It drives me bonkers that I can get interrupted and distracted when I get a text message from friends or family. I haven’t figured out the perfect solution on how to deal with this. But I try to wait to reply to people. With some of my friends I realized the longer I wait to respond the more they will lean on somebody else for attention. And for somebody like myself who’s a people pleaser I’ve even started not replying to people at all. Does every text need a reply? No! I’m learning slowly. If you have any tips or advice on how to deal with text messages from friends and family intrude in your life please let me know. maybe I need to treat it like email or only check my text messages one time a day. My friends and family might think something has happened to me though 😅
@@jenshark4 I mean I still reply to everyone eventually. The only kind I don’t reply to are when someone just messages, “hey.” At that point they just want entertainment. But if I didn’t respond people would probably think that I hated them. I know because my best friend who has mad ADD hasn’t messaged me back in a month and I’m like, hello? Why? But anyway. 😂 little notepad purchased haha
I feel you on this. I got a new phone recently and I think I'm gonna use my old phone to access social media and avoid putting any social media apps on my new phone (with the exception of spotify and TH-cam which I use for music). I find myself spending 100s of hours doomscrolling on instagram and tiktok and beyond sending memes to friends I don't get any real pleasure from it. But I don't want to get rid of it because that is often the only time I can stay in contact with my peers. At least I can set aside a time to scroll online and not carry those distractions with me when I go out.
@@jenshark4 I get it. I became so distracted by txt message alerts that I turned them off. I check every few hours, and respond when a response is needed. And when I respond, I try to make it a thoughtful reply - not just filling air space. So far, this is working for me. I really like Austin's idea of carrying a small note book... I even have on on hand. I'm putting it in my pocket now.
I'm 53 yrs old and I've always preferred notebooks and yes, paper calendars. Still have and use them although I do use my phone too. But the feeling of paper is more pleasing to me. I had a Filofax for years and years. I carried it everywhere 😂
Great video! Greetings from Sweden 🌹
Thanks for the comment, glad to hear it!
Jim rohn got me to truly understand the value of the notebook. As the years go on, and your library grows ( with your journals and other books ) you'll look back with astonishment.
Again I can't express enough how carrying around journals the last 2 years has significantly improved my life and slowed down this racing brain a bit. I already have a bin full of journals like a crazy person.... i like it.
That's awesome, thanks for commenting
It’s wild to me that using a daily notebook isn’t a common occurrence for the younger generations, but I’m stoked to see that you have found joy in non-tech mediums! You’ll start to cherish those notebooks and you’ll find you remember what you wrote years even 10+ years later.
this is basically what i did while deployed in the navy for like 9 months and man. its one hell of a ride to look back on. its a tiny moleskine, beaten to hell, but it didnt leave my back pocket once for the entire deployment. would write random thoughts and things i needed to remember, random doodles, and everything in between. its like a time capsule that reminds me how much i am glad im not in the navy any more. its precious.
It's refreshing to see such thoughtful content. I've become weary of feeling the constant nagging pull of social media. It is nonstop as long as my phone is within sight or within reach.
I recently went back to wearing a watch, using analog clocks in the house to avoid having to use my phone to check the time. I also bought a wall calendar for logging upcoming appointments and events so I can work to remember things instead of relying on my phone. This is greatly reducing my need to check what I have on my cellphone. I am also setting up a dedicated spot for it, a base like analog phones had, which helps me to treat it like more the old analog phone on a pigtail.
I've been recalling how much more creative I was before getting a cellphone, how much quieter my mind was, and how good it felt to not feel its pull every waking moment.
I'm someone who sits with a journal writing a couple of pages every morning, and this practice has been invaluable to me over the years. I've tried specific journals for things, like content ideas, shopping lists, etc. I tried getting notebooks for specific things, like gardening, creative idea hasn't gone well as these are now scattered around the house mocking me. But I have to say, I'm very intrigued by your idea and am going to give it a try. It's a notebook without expectations attached. I'm glad I ran onto your video today.
Me too! Thanks for dropping by
I actually started doing something like this during March of this year. As an artist there’s so much pressure for what i put down in notebooks or sketchbooks-i feel as though everything i write down/draw must look aesthetically pleasing right off the bat. And the fear of it “not matching the aesthetic” of what i had previously drawn or of the cover of the book, i refrain from adding anything into it. But then i bought a tiny little 3$ 200-page blank sketchbook and thought “screw it I’ll put anything i want into this, no matter how messy or pretty.” I referred to it as my raw thoughts. so many thoughts, quotes, ideas, and feelings have been poured into it, and it’s one of my favorite notebooks to this day. I still have around a hundred little pages left of it, too. Instagram has also been taking so much of my focus and energy to the point where I just deleted it, and coming across this video makes me even more eager to continue writing in that little raw book. Its quite inspiring to see your journey with your little book too :)
That's awesome!
Oh I also draw. Sometimes
You are not an artist you are a drawer.
Welcome to the notebook club.
I do enjoy the silence of paper.
I appreciate you for highlighting
The importance of getting to paper without the detailing features of the electronic gadgets.
You clarified that "senior moments" are moments shared by all- when we forget a brilliant idea.
Notebooks are wonderful space for creativity
I’m 54 and always carry my ‘junk book’. Creative ideas, lists, brain dumps, whatever. Calling it a junk book makes it feel durable, portable and totally unrelated to the internet’s corporate agenda.
This is beautiful.
I just purchased my notebook today! I am starting tomorrow with the hope of replacing my phone and feel more connected with my life. Thanks for the encouragement !
You're welcome!
You stopped me from scrolling. Hooked me in instantly. Incredible storytelling. I’m inspired!
Awesome! Thank you!
After 12 years of apps and paperless I returned to paper with bullet journaling. With your influence I have now moved to pocket using Traveler’s notebook passport size. Liberating and enabling. Thank you for the excellent video ❤
You're welcome!
@@AustinSchrock You're 😅
@@peaceformula5830 facts
I'm 32, and I feel like I grew up in the last decade before technology REALLY took off. I still hold onto the things that feel real... paper and pen, journals, notebooks, real books with textured paper and that special book smell... no app will ever replace any of this for me. And for the same reason, all the art I create is with pen, pencil, paint and paper. Theres something subtly magical about it. Something no phone could replace. Loved this video ❤
Thanks for sharing, I appreciate the feedback
I got a small note book for Christmas one year and I've been doing exactly what you have with your mini notebook and its so amazing. I'm 13 and its so nice to have something that doesn't distract me or something I can doodle on in class. In my opinion it is better than my phone and I've almost filled it out. I've had that notebook for almost 2 years and I love seeing other people doing the same thing, it feels so special and makes me happy I don't know why. Anyways, love this video and I hope you are doing well
Thank you 🙏
After 5 years at my current job, I still get asked why I write my daily to-do lists in sketch books instead of just using Onenote that comes on our work computers. I still have to explain that I just much prefer writing by hand. Not only because I like my own handwriting, but because it feels so much better than clacking away at a keyboard. There's also the record keeping aspect of it. All my coworkers delete their notes after they complete a task, whereas my literal paper trail only gets bigger with each day. It's helped me in multiple situations when something goes wrong and we have to backtrack to the source.
Wow, this makes me feel old and disoriented….It’s hard to believe I’ve lived long enough that people are now “rediscovering” pens and notebooks, but at the same time I’m very glad they are. I’m 46 and I’ve been carrying around a little notebook like this in my purse for most of my life to jot down notes, thoughts, and general impressions of the world around me. I’ve also written by hand in a journal for most of my life. I’m a writer and I write all my first drafts by hand (then revise them on the computer). I feel more disconnected from what I’m writing when it’s on a screen. You’re so right that notebooks will never distract you like cell phones will. I feel like I’m in a constant battle with my phone to keep it from taking over my life and claiming my brain. I’m old enough to know all that has been lost with this new technology. Keep writing in that notebook!!
Yes, this is me too (I'm 40) I couldn't agree more. I feel very strange watching this because I never stopped using pen and paper, have always carried a notebook with me, written things down to clarify them before typing them up on a computer - I had no idea this was such an 'unusual' practice that people are now 'rediscovering' and 'moving back to'. I love hand-writing things. I've kept a personal journal since I was 9/10 and continue to do so (I have a dedicated cupboard with all my diaries and hand-written stories) It is such a grounding practice that I have never wanted to give up.
Came to comments to say/see this. To think I'd live to see kids 'discover' writing. Wait till they discover 'cash' or 'walking'.
Relate to this 100%. And the neuroscience looking at distractedness, even with a device that's "turned off" yet within reach, is crystal clear that our devices influence us negatively in ways we don't appreciate
The NSA will not be happy about this.
😂😂😂😂 your personal FBI agent will be upset now
I don't carry a notebook with me but I definitely collect notebooks. I love the feeling of opening up a fresh new page and just writing away on it. I have so many notebooks filled with all my ideas for art projects or animations.
It is so great to see people showing an interest in using notebooks. Thank you for this video!
I've been journaling since I was in 3rd grade.
I'm 53. That's a lot of notebooks. Lol
But it's also a lot of really cool creative thoughts, poems, doodles, stories.
I've just started to transcribe some of this into my laptop. It's a smart way to save them....but somehow the end result feels a bit hollow.
It's being able to hold that ancient Hello Kitty journal and see where my 9 year old self wrote my messy, purple marker confessions.
Nothing fully replaces those paper memories.
I’m with ya on this one. Coming from an Office Supply Store multigenerational owning family, I grew up loving paper products and writing utensils. Was always experimenting with them. Then, the digital/electronic age invaded my life and I jumped on board. After all these years living life via a smart phone, I’m ready to get back to pen and paper. Your video inspires me to do so. Continue with your good work!
Will do!
So happy you discovered this simple pleasure that will be there when the power goes out, cell tower issues, etc…back to basics.
Me too!
Man, I love to see that someone else also has a habit like this! I call my notebook my "commonplace book" because I put all of my thoughts into it! I really like how you said that what you write down is organic, and I guess it works the best when it grows naturally. Can't wait for future videos!
I had no idea there was this many people interested! That’s awesome!
As someone who journals and writes short stories almost exclusively on paper, it was really interesting to see your point of view on this. For me writing with pen and paper comes naturally and i've always prefered it, and I never even considered that a lot of people find it hard to get into or even think it's cool!
🤓
For me I really enjoy journaling and writing on paper, but I don't often have it with me so I end up using my phone a lot. So the small size of this appeals to me.
I've been writing for about a decade and for 8 of those years I used a typewriter, but a year and a half ago I switched to fountain pens and fountain pen notebooks. My ideas have gone through the roof since I stopped using technology for writing! And like CS Lewis, if I really need to focus on what I'm writing, I use something even slower than a fountain pen...a feather quill with powdered ink, takes such a long time to dry even with an ink blotter, but it is completely worth it. There's no price on creativity. I've also found that blue ink makes me more creative, or using an ink that is similar in color to the fountain pen I'm using. My current one is a blue and silver resin...beautiful. and my ink is the J. Herbin Kyanite, a beautiful blue ink with flecks of silver in it.
I’m so happy you’re young!! And finding this out.. I have a small notebook in my purse. And dozens around my house literally. I love them… My thoughts, my lists, my journals. Just to WRITE!!!! Writing things done physically actually help you remember. Taking time todo that ,,I love my notebooks
Hey Austin! I am so glad this video is blowing up for you (for all the right reasons) and your channel is getting the recognition it deserves. I look back at your old videos and see that even tho they don't have so many views, that did not stop you for continuing the effort for creating top notch videos that actually add value to the viewer! This is the textbook example of hardwork pays off! Congratulations man!
I appreciate that a lot!
We had green notebooks about that size when I was in the Navy. It was called a "wheel book" by some, and an "ass brain" by others. Very useful things, especially for keeping track of what you are doing and why. Long before I'd ever heard of "bullet journaling," that thing helped me keep on task and identify anything that kept me from getting the job done. I highly recommend getting yourself one.
It was because you are a Big Wheel if you carried one.
Just bought a notebook for video ideas and titling concepts! Funny that this would pop into my feed… I’m gonna get a small notebook now and try this!
That's awesome!
This must explain the recent bangers. Keep it up Pat
Mr fortnite top 10 man
I used to have an A5 journal notebook, and I always watched “journal with me” videos on TH-cam. They used a lot of stickers, which were really cute. The problem was, I was never satisfied with my own journal, I felt it wasn’t as aesthetic as the youtubers’. I kept buying new notebooks and a lot of stickers to meet my expectations, and while it was satisfying, it didn’t feel quite right.
Then one day, I saw your video ,only used a pocket notebook and a pen.
So, I bought a pocket notebook five months ago. I didn’t use any stickers I just wrote down whatever came to mind. I didn’t care about aesthetics anymore. And it changed my perspective about journaling
I’ve been carrying my commonplace journal for over a year. Everything goes in: to-do’s, favorite quotes, things my kids say that I want to remember, events and their attendees, book summaries, frustrations, family history, meal plans, and garden ideas.
A smaller version might be helpful while I’m working, as the book I use is slightly larger than a mass-market paperback.
Excellent video- just subscribed :)
Glad you enjoyed, thanks for commenting with your experience!
I love the sound and feeling of paper especially the sound of flipping through it when it's filled. 😍
Same :)
I’ve written down (on the notes app) every single idea or cool thing I want to do in the future since my sophomore year in high school. I have ~70 locations to visit, hobbies I want to pursue, dreams I want to achieve, and items I want to get. I had a lot of trouble picking these things up randomly when they were useful (like christmas) so I decided to just write whatever I think of. I now have a good set of things I can preoccupy my life with in the future and I am very happy to do so. I also note my emotions as well and it helps me process them.
I saw this a year ago. In that time I've filled 3 notebooks with daily thoughts, to-do lists, emotions and stickers. Before I saw this video it took me ages to fill notebooks and I only had like one (out of like 20 very very pretty ones) that I finished. This is one of the rare journaling videos that actually changed how I record information
Thanks for sharing
Journaling has been the foundation of my self improvement journey. Our thoughts are powerful and when we write them out it gives us the chance to dissect and organize our ideas. 💚
So true!
I love both technology AND journaling! Technology has its place, but I couldn't tell you how many times I've picked up my phone to do something and instantly got distracted!🤦🏻♀️
But if I jot down a note, I'm not distracted. And if you write something vs typing, you'll remember it better too.
Great video. Glad I found you.
As a tip to younger people who haven’t habitually kept a notebook before, I would say,
1. Go for a very basic and very standard notebook. The kind you might buy in a pack from the supermarket or dollar store. You can also buy or make covers to fit them which you shift onto each new one.
2. Use the cardboard backing or cover for basic information: eg contacts (include your own) Write that kind of stuff from the back towards the front. You can write reminders from the back and (gasp!) tear them out later.
3. Make sure that the format is one that suits the lifestyle you really have: the clothes you really wear every day or the standard pockets of a backpack or purse.
4. If you don’t mind small size pens, then you can jam mini pens down the spiral or binding, or clip it across so it doesn’t add to the outline size of the book. And since these little pens tend to come in packs, you can have one in every coat or bag. A “space pen” is great because they don’t leak, break or dry up. But you have to be realistic about how reliable you are, as these are expensive to replace.
People learning what we did 20 yrs ago it's kinda odd
This was something that we did daily when I was in the Army Infantry (there were no cell phones, yet). I also carry pocket notebooks today, when working in aerospace or manufacturing industries. Yes, I have access to all kinds of computers, and have for most of my life (I was into computers before it was cool, yoh!) but one of the biggest lessons I learned was that the user interface is just as important as the capabilities of the system. Until smart phones developed the touchscreen interface they were only used by people desperate for the functionality of the hand-held computer systems, i.e. business and tech gurus. A quick, note taking or messaging app that is always there, can't be intercepted by IT, and just feels natural? Even in the 21st Century, there's room for pen & paper.
And if you find a notebook you really like, buy a bunch of them at once for the future. You likely will never find that style of notebook again.
...Listening to this while working, Austin, you struck a chord & hit it hard. The overall video & message/reasonings are amazing & very helpful! I'm just focusing on two sentences...
"Attention is one of the rarest and most valued Commodities in our world today. If you can learn how to capture someone's attention & hold it, you instantly have an opportunity that no one else has." This rings true. I had to share it with our VP & try to spread this out. What a quote... keep doing what you're doing Bro!
Will do, thanks for stopping by!
In the 90s used to make a lot of notes everywhere I went cause I was diagnosed with a memory problem. Even then people looked at me strange.
But neuropsychologists told me that writing is very powerful with memory. 1. Writing 2. Seeing yourself write 3. Speaking what you are writing and 4. Listening to yourself speak... Uses at least 4 parts of your brain helping you to think and remember things.
Actually using all your senses (writing, seeing what you're writing, saying it aloud) are one of the best ways to learn something new-because these senses imprint it in our brain; our brain gets engaged, absorbed in it. It is related to memory -long term memory. Valid point.
I've always liked the aesthetic of pen and paper. I think the permanence of it forces you to think more. It takes longer to write, and longer to erase/correct your writings. If you want to get something done, you're forced to slow down. What I find so cool about this is that, the fact is people are capable of more than they think, but the hurriedness of society pacifies their full ability. There's nothing wrong with slowing down. Just focus.
Congratulations on the viral video Austin, just checked your videos out and it looks like you have been putting a lot of work and passion into your videos for quite awhile. It must be really rewarding for you to see this video pop like it has. 🙂
Nice to see someone as young as you can see the benefits of using a notebook. I myself use the same thing. Hello, I still use a manual typewriter. I have an electric selective and a 1946 Royal desktop that I am working on but I do have a collection of portable manual typewriters. I own about 15 of those and mostly Smith-Corona’s. From 1946 thru the 1960’s. I have a beautiful 1959 Olympia SM4. Hunter Green and works great and looks like new. I use my typewriters to write to friends and relatives. Been typing since I was 16 when I took up typing classes in my High School. Going to be 74 this coming August and just love typing. You have a good head on your shoulders. You will do fine in life. Good video.
thank you for the feedback
Last year I decided to do something similar! I called it my "everything journal", and I put everything into it. Scribbles on napkins, business cards, poems, thoughts, drawings, etc. At the end of the year, I had a book full of memories and replaced it for 2023. I think I didn't realize how much of myself I poured into the journal until I went back through it on NYE.
Thanks, Austin. You hit the nail on the head with so many points. I'm a stationery nerd and LOVE notebooks. I just find that the perfectionist in me doesn't want to START writing in one for fear that I'll change what I want to use the notebook for and then I'll need to go buy another notebook. LOL. I need to get over that! ;)
That's definitely a real problem! When I bought this notepad I wrote in the front "anything and everything" to remind myself that there's no "right" or "wrong" here, just "did" or "didn't." Hope this helps!
I tend to change the purpose of my notebooks frequently, so I like spiral bound ones where its easy to just rip out the pages from the old project and then only the clean sheets are left for me to use it for something else.
@@Mrs.Silversmith - Very good point. Thank you!
Oh! Someone who knows how to spell stationery
Oh! Someone who knows how to spell stationery in the correct context!
In the last years of university, the tasks, appointments and duties became a little overwhelming, so I started to use a notebook as well to record all of my tasks and plans. It helped me a lot to organize my life at the time.