For those of us with woefully average gray matter, our minds have limited reach. For the past, they are enthusiastic but incompetent archivists. In the present, they reach for the most provocative fragments of ideas, often choosing what’s shiny over what’s clear.
Writing provides scaffolding. Structure for the unstructured, undisciplined mind. It’s a practical tool for thinking more effectively. And sometimes, it’s the best way to truly begin to think at all.
Let’s call your mind’s default setting “perpetual approximation mode.” Your mind might flit from a scrap of gossip, to a romantic interest, to a business idea, to an argument that will never actually happen. You can spend your entire life hopping among these shiny fragments without searching for underlying meaning until tragedy, loss, or opportunity slaps you into awareness. Let it, and your mind will gladly spend time mentally rehearsing and reliving scenarios rather than living new ones.
Writing forces you to tidy that mental clutter. To articulate things with a level of context and coherence the mind alone can’t achieve.
Writing expands your working memory, lets you be more brilliant on paper than you can be in person. While some of this brilliance comes from enabling us to connect larger and larger ideas, much of it comes from stopping, uh… non-brilliance. Writing reveals what you don’t know, what you can’t see when an idea is only held in your head. Biases, blind spots, and assumptions you can’t grasp internally.
“Reading maketh a full man… writing maketh an exact man.”
~Francis Bacon
At its best, writing (and reading) can expose the ugly, uncomfortable, or unrealistic parts of your thoughts. It can pluck out parasitic ideas burrowed so deeply that they imperceptibly steer your feelings and beliefs. Sometimes this uprooting will reveal that the lustrous potential of a new idea is a mirage, or that your understanding of someone’s motive is incomplete. Or maybe writing will help you see your own projected bullshit reflected back to you.
If you’re repeatedly drawn to a thought, feeling, or belief, write it out.
Be fast, be sloppy.
Just as children ask why, why, why, you can repeat the question “why do I think/feel/believe this?” a few times. What plops onto the page may surprise you. So too will the headspace that clears from pouring out the canned spaghetti of unconnected thoughts.
“Writing about yourself seems to be a lot like sticking a branch into clear river-water and roiling up the muddy bottom.”
~Stephen King, Different Seasons (Book)
“I write entirely to find out what I’m thinking, what I’m looking at, what I see and what it means. What I want and what I fear.”
~Joan Didion, Why I Write (Essay)