add links

This commit is contained in:
David Eisinger
2026-01-07 14:51:30 -05:00
parent e6f01d1707
commit 3fd85db412
8 changed files with 7229 additions and 6 deletions

View File

@@ -33,6 +33,34 @@ references:
url: https://macwright.com/2025/12/07/year-in-review
date: 2025-12-18T15:21:17Z
file: macwright-com-5fr93r.txt
- title: "My 2026 Q1 Planning and Moving to a New Planner Writing at Large"
url: https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/
date: 2026-01-07T19:49:42Z
file: writingatlarge-com-3xaqup.txt
- title: "Thin Desires Are Eating Your Life"
url: https://www.joanwestenberg.com/thin-desires-are-eating-your-life/
date: 2026-01-07T19:49:47Z
file: www-joanwestenberg-com-4eftax.txt
- title: "Thin Desires Are Eating Your Life. “A thick desire is one th..."
url: https://kottke.org/25/12/0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y
date: 2026-01-07T19:49:48Z
file: kottke-org-hwapp6.txt
- title: "A blog is a biography | Dries Buytaert"
url: https://dri.es/a-blog-is-a-biography
date: 2026-01-07T19:49:50Z
file: dri-es-enwpkq.txt
- title: "Lars-Christian Simonsen Manu"
url: https://manuelmoreale.com/interview/lars-christian-simonsen
date: 2026-01-07T19:49:52Z
file: manuelmoreale-com-zl2mwc.txt
- title: "This life gives you nothing - Blackbird Spyplane"
url: https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/this-life-gives-you-nothing
date: 2026-01-07T19:49:58Z
file: www-blackbirdspyplane-com-52g1uj.txt
- title: "On reading Proust vs experiencing the world intermediated by..."
url: https://kottke.org/25/12/0048058-on-reading-proust-vs-expe
date: 2026-01-07T19:49:59Z
file: kottke-org-l0focf.txt
---
* Nev 4th birthday
@@ -130,10 +158,26 @@ references:
### Links
* [Title][19]
* [Title][20]
* [Title][21]
* [My 2026 Q1 Planning and Moving to a New Planner Writing at Large][19]
[19]: https://example.com/
[20]: https://example.com/
[21]: https://example.com/
> Thats it. There are no stickers in my planner, no highlighters, illustrations and such. Its a practical tool for me. I wont photograph it for the blog or social media because its so personal, and thats its job to work for me, not to generate content or likes. It isnt pretty, but boy is it functional. I reference it at least one or two time a day every day. From it stems my daily to-do list, my weekly review, my long and short term plans. Its an investment thats paid dividends over the years, and from what I can tell my new format promises to pay me back even more.
* [Thin Desires Are Eating Your Life][20] ([via][21])
> The business model of most consumer technology is to identify some thick desire, find the part of it that produces a neurological reward, and then deliver that reward without the rest of the package.
* [A blog is a biography | Dries Buytaert][22] ([via][23])
> If that idea feels compelling, this might be a good time to start a blog or a website. Not to build a large audience, but just to leave a trail. Future you may be grateful you began.
* [This life gives you nothing - Blackbird Spyplane][24] ([via][25])
> When we do this, we dont just find ourselves with more time on our hands, but with more life on our hands, too. Because we set things back in motion. The world remains the same, but the way we see it changes.
[19]: https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/
[20]: https://www.joanwestenberg.com/thin-desires-are-eating-your-life/
[21]: https://kottke.org/25/12/0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y
[22]: https://dri.es/a-blog-is-a-biography
[23]: https://manuelmoreale.com/interview/lars-christian-simonsen
[24]: https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/this-life-gives-you-nothing
[25]: https://kottke.org/25/12/0048058-on-reading-proust-vs-expe

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,79 @@
[1]
[2]Dries Buytaert
[3]Blog [4]Projects [5]Photos [6]About
[7]A blog is a biography
A mother in bed holds a newborn baby, surrounded by three formally dressed
adults in a hospital room. My mom as a newborn in her mother's arms, surrounded
by my grandparents and great-grandparents.
I never knew my great grandparents. They left no diary, no letters, only a
handful of photographs. Sometimes I look at those photos and wonder what they
cared about. What were their days like? What made them laugh? What problems
were they working through?
Then I realize it could be different for my descendants. A long-running blog
like mine is effectively an autobiography.
So far, it captures nearly twenty years of my life: my PhD work, the birth of
my children, and the years of learning how to lead Drupal and build a
community. It even captures the excitement of starting two companies, and the
lessons I learned along the way.
And in recent years, it captures the late night posts where I try to make sense
of what AI might change. They are a snapshot of a world in transition. One day,
it may be hard to remember AI was ever new.
In a way, a blog is a digital time capsule. It is the kind of record I wish my
great grandparents had left behind.
I did not start blogging with this in mind. I wrote to share ideas, to think
out loud, to guide the Drupal community, and to connect with others. The
personal archive was a side effect.
Now I see it differently. Somewhere in there is a version of me becoming a
father. A version trying to figure out how to build something that lasts. A
version wrestling, late at night, with technology changes happening in front of
me.
If my grandchildren ever want to know who I was, they will not have to guess.
They will be able to hear my voice.
If that idea feels compelling, this might be a good time to start a blog or a
website. Not to build a large audience, but just to leave a trail. Future you
may be grateful you began.
— Dries Buytaert
Join 5,000+ readers. Two decades building Drupal and Acquia. Thoughts on Open
Source, technology, and business.
[8][ ] Subscribe
[10]Subscribe via RSS · [11]Email me
December 12, 2025 1 min read time
• [12]Digital preservation
• [13]My site
• [14]Writing
[15] db
References:
[1] https://dri.es/status
[2] https://dri.es/
[3] https://dri.es/blog
[4] https://dri.es/projects
[5] https://dri.es/photos
[6] https://dri.es/about
[7] https://dri.es/a-blog-is-a-biography
[10] https://dri.es/rss.xml
[11] mailto:dries@buytaert.net
[12] https://dri.es/tag/digital-preservation
[13] https://dri.es/tag/my-site
[14] https://dri.es/tag/writing
[15] https://dri.es/colophon

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,238 @@
[1]go to homepage [2] KOTTKE DOT ORG
go to homepage
[3]go to homepage
go to homepage
[4]go to homepage
go to homepage
[5]go to homepage [6] KOTTKE DOT ORG
[7][ ]
MENU
[8]
Member Login
• [9]Home
• [10]Membership
• [11]Newsletter
• [12]Goods
• [13]Archive + Tags
• [14]About/Contact
dark mode light mode
Advertise here with [16]Carbon Ads
Socials & More
• [17]Newsletter
• [18]RSS Feed
• [19]Bluesky
• [20]Mastodon
This site is made possible by [21]member support. 💞
Big thanks to [22]Arcustech for hosting the site and offering amazing tech
support.
When you buy through links on kottke.org, I may earn an affiliate commission.
Thanks for supporting the site!
kottke.org. home of fine hypertext products since 1998.
Beloved by 86.47% of the web.
[23]🍔 [24]💀 [25]📸 [26]😭 [27]🕳️ [28]🤠 [29]🎬 [30]🥔
× close
posted Dec 29 @ 11:21 AM by [31]Jason Kottke  ·  gift link
[32]Thin Desires Are Eating Your Life. “A thick desire is one that changes you
in the process of pursuing it. A thin desire is one that doesnt.”
[33]
[thumb-4807]
[34]
Thin Desires Are Eating Your Life · joanwestenberg.com
The defining experience of our age seems to be hunger.  We're hungry for more,
but we have more than we need.  We're hungry for less, while more accumulates
and multiplies. We're hungry and we don't have words to articulate why. We're
hungry, and we're lacking and we're wanting. We are
[35][ ] Share
[36]Open post [37]Copy link [38]Translate
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
[39]Bluesky [40]Mastodon [41]Reddit [42]Threads
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
[43]Email [44]Text/SMS [45]WhatsApp
Comments 3
Sort by: thread — [46]thread . [47]latest . [48]faves
Jason Kottke reposted 2025-12-29T17:12:34Z
[49]@adora.io[50]Bluesky
"The business model of most consumer technology is to identify some thick
desire, find the part of it that produces a neurological reward, and then
deliver that reward without the rest of the package."
Gonna be thinking about this one for a while.
[51]https://bsky.app/profile/kottke.org/post/3mb5atkftcw2w
"The business model of most consumer technology is to identify some thick
desire, find the part of it that produces a neurological reward, and then
deliver that reward without the rest of the package." Gonna be thinking about
this one for a while. https://bsky.app/profile/kottke.org/post/3mb5atkftcw2w
[52]Reply [53]Share
C
Chris Bredesen 2025-12-29T20:31:22Z
What a superb article. Thank you for sharing!
What a superb article. Thank you for sharing!
[54]Reply [55]Share
K
Kelsey P. 2026-01-05T04:16:04Z
I think Ill be using this languaging for a while, thanks for pointing us to
it! It brings to mind that were most fulfilled when our desires meet our own
idiosyncrasies, not the fulfillment of others narratives or expectations. I
was reminded of this the hard way a couple months ago when we pivoted from our
usual family vacation style of low-dopamine, forest bathing/beach combing to
the wildly expensive (for us), social currency of Legoland. Id say it was a
thin desire on my part to avoid depriving my kids of what culturally is
relevant; it takes commitment and the courage to live your values with thick
desires!
I think Ill be using this languaging for a while, thanks for pointing us to
it! It brings to mind that were most fulfilled when our desires meet our own
idiosyncrasies, not the fulfillment of others narratives or expectations. I
was reminded of this the hard way a couple months ago when we pivoted from our
usual family vacation style of low-dopamine, forest bathing/beach combing to
the wildly expensive (for us), social currency of Legoland. Id say it was a
thin desire on my part to avoid depriving my kids of what culturally is
relevant; it takes commitment and the courage to live your values with thick
desires!
[56]Reply [57]Share
×
Hello! In order to comment or fave, you need to be a current kottke.org member.
If you'd like to sign up for a membership to support the site and join the
conversation, [58]you can explore your options here.
Existing members can [59]sign in here. If you're a former member, you can [60]
renew your membership.
Note: If you are a member and tried to log in, it didn't work, and now you're
stuck in a neverending login loop of death, try disabling any ad blockers or
extensions. Or try [61]logging out and then [62]back in. Still having trouble?
[63]Email me!
×
In order to comment or fave, you need to be a current kottke.org member. [64]
Check out your options for renewal.
×
Change your display name
[65][ ] [66][ ] [67][Change]
This is the name that'll be displayed next to comments you make on kottke.org;
your email will not be displayed publicly. I'd encourage you to use your real
name (or at least your first name and last initial) but you can also pick
something that you go by when you participate in communities online. Choose
something durable and reasonably unique (not "Me" or "anon"). Please don't
change this often. No impersonation.
Note: I'm letting folks change their display names because the membership
service that kottke.org uses collects full names and I thought some people
might not want their names displayed publicly here. If it gets abused, I might
disable this feature.
×
If you feel like this comment goes against the grain of the [68]community
guidelines or is otherwise inappropriate, [69]please let me know and I will
take a look at it.
Hello! In order to leave a comment, you need to be a current kottke.org member.
If you'd like to sign up for a membership to support the site and join the
conversation, [70]you can explore your options here.
Existing members can [71]sign in here. If you're a former member, you can [72]
renew your membership.
Note: If you are a member and tried to log in, it didn't work, and now you're
stuck in a neverending login loop of death, try disabling any ad blockers or
extensions. Or try [73] logging out and then [74]back in. Still having trouble?
[75]Email me!
References:
[1] https://kottke.org/
[2] https://kottke.org/
[3] https://kottke.org/
[4] https://kottke.org/
[5] https://kottke.org/
[6] https://kottke.org/
[8] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_in
[9] https://kottke.org/
[10] https://kottke.org/members
[11] https://kottke.org/newsletter
[12] https://kottke.org/goods
[13] https://kottke.org/everfresh
[14] https://kottke.org/about
[16] http://carbonads.net/?utm_source=kottkeorg&utm_medium=ad_via_link&utm_campaign=in_unit&utm_term=carbon
[17] https://kottke.org/newsletter
[18] http://feeds.kottke.org/main
[19] https://bsky.app/profile/kottke.org
[20] https://mastodon.social/@kottke
[21] https://kottke.org/members
[22] https://www.arcustech.com/
[23] https://kottke.org/tag/burgers
[24] https://kottke.org/tag/death
[25] https://kottke.org/tag/photography
[26] https://kottke.org/tag/crying%20at%20work
[27] https://kottke.org/tag/black%20holes
[28] https://kottke.org/tag/Old%20Custer
[29] https://kottke.org/tag/film%20school
[30] https://kottke.org/tag/potatoes
[31] http://www.kottke.org/
[32] https://www.joanwestenberg.com/thin-desires-are-eating-your-life/
[33] https://www.joanwestenberg.com/thin-desires-are-eating-your-life/
[34] https://www.joanwestenberg.com/thin-desires-are-eating-your-life/
[36] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y
[37] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y
[38] https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&u=https%3A%2F%2Fkottke.org%2F25%2F12%2F0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y
[39] https://bsky.app/intent/compose?text=Thin%20Desires%20Are%20Eating%20Your%20Life.%20%22A%20thick%20desire%20is%20one%20that%20changes%20you%20in%20the%20process%20of%20pursuing%20it.%20A%20thin%20desire%20is%20one%20that%20doesn%27t.%22%20https%3A%2F%2Fkottke.org%2F25%2F12%2F0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y
[40] https://mastodonshare.com/?text=https%3A%2F%2Fkottke.org%2F25%2F12%2F0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y
[41] https://reddit.com/submit?url=https%3A%2F%2Fkottke.org%2F25%2F12%2F0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y
[42] https://threads.net/intent/post?text=Thin%20Desires%20Are%20Eating%20Your%20Life.%20%22A%20thick%20desire%20is%20one%20that%20changes%20you%20in%20the%20process%20of%20pursuing%20it.%20A%20thin%20desire%20is%20one%20that%20doesn%27t.%22%20https%3A%2F%2Fkottke.org%2F25%2F12%2F0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y
[43] https://kottke.org/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#5b64282e39313e382f6618333e38307e696b342e2f7e696b2f3332287e696b30342f2f303e7534293c7e696b2b34282f7575757d39343f2266332f2f2b287e681a7e691d7e691d30342f2f303e7534293c7e691d696e7e691d6a697e691d6b6b6f636b6c62762f333235763f3e2832293e28763a293e763e3a2f32353c7622
[44] sms:?body=https%3A%2F%2Fkottke.org%2F25%2F12%2F0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y
[45] https://wa.me/?text=https%3A%2F%2Fkottke.org%2F25%2F12%2F0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y
[46] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y#
[47] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y#
[48] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y#
[49] https://bsky.app/profile/adora.io/post/3mb5c5juwps25
[50] https://bsky.app/profile/adora.io/post/3mb5c5juwps25
[51] https://bsky.app/profile/kottke.org/post/3mb5atkftcw2w
[52] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y#
[53] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y#cmt-13678
[54] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y#
[55] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y#cmt-13680
[56] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y#
[57] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048079-thin-desires-are-eating-y#cmt-13738
[58] https://kottke.org/members
[59] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_in
[60] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_in
[61] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_out
[62] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_in
[63] https://kottke.org/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#83e9e2f0ecedc3e8ecf7f7e8e6adecf1e4bcf0f6e1e9e6e0f7bee8ecf7f7e8e6adecf1e4a3e5e6e6e7e1e2e0e8
[64] https://kottke.memberful.com/account/subscriptions
[68] https://kottke.org/threads/guidelines
[69] https://kottke.org/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#573d36243839173c3823233c3279382530682422353d3234236a3c3823233c327938253077313b36303032337734383a3a323923
[70] https://kottke.org/members
[71] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_in
[72] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_in
[73] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_out
[74] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_in
[75] https://kottke.org/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#d1bbb0a2bebf91babea5a5bab4ffbea3b6eea2a4b3bbb4b2a5ecbabea5a5bab4ffbea3b6f1b7b4b4b5b3b0b2ba

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,193 @@
[1]go to homepage [2] KOTTKE DOT ORG
go to homepage
[3]go to homepage
go to homepage
[4]go to homepage
go to homepage
[5]go to homepage [6] KOTTKE DOT ORG
[7][ ]
MENU
[8]
Member Login
• [9]Home
• [10]Membership
• [11]Newsletter
• [12]Goods
• [13]Archive + Tags
• [14]About/Contact
dark mode light mode
Advertise here with [16]Carbon Ads
Socials & More
• [17]Newsletter
• [18]RSS Feed
• [19]Bluesky
• [20]Mastodon
This site is made possible by [21]member support. 💞
Big thanks to [22]Arcustech for hosting the site and offering amazing tech
support.
When you buy through links on kottke.org, I may earn an affiliate commission.
Thanks for supporting the site!
kottke.org. home of fine hypertext products since 1998.
Beloved by 86.47% of the web.
[23]🍔 [24]💀 [25]📸 [26]😭 [27]🕳️ [28]🤠 [29]🎬 [30]🥔
× close
posted Dec 19 @ 05:39 PM by [31]Jason Kottke  ·  gift link
[32]On reading Proust vs experiencing the world intermediated by screens (even
when youre not on one). “Your attention is, on a foundational level, all you
have. This is why it feels worse than bad to waste it. It feels annihilating.”
[33]
[thumb-4805]
[34]
This life gives you nothing · blackbirdspyplane.com
Your attention is all you have. Wasting it is annihilating. Blackbird Spyplane
saves literacy in a monumental Year-End Essay.
[35][ ] Share
[36]Open post [37]Copy link [38]Translate
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
[39]Bluesky [40]Mastodon [41]Reddit [42]Threads
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
[43]Email [44]Text/SMS [45]WhatsApp
Comments 1
Sort by: thread — [46]thread . [47]latest . [48]faves
R
Ramanan 2025-12-23T20:58:07Z
Felt called out reading the section on thinking in tweets. This was a good
read!
Felt called out reading the section on thinking in tweets. This was a good
read!
[49]Reply [50]Share
×
Hello! In order to comment or fave, you need to be a current kottke.org member.
If you'd like to sign up for a membership to support the site and join the
conversation, [51]you can explore your options here.
Existing members can [52]sign in here. If you're a former member, you can [53]
renew your membership.
Note: If you are a member and tried to log in, it didn't work, and now you're
stuck in a neverending login loop of death, try disabling any ad blockers or
extensions. Or try [54]logging out and then [55]back in. Still having trouble?
[56]Email me!
×
In order to comment or fave, you need to be a current kottke.org member. [57]
Check out your options for renewal.
×
Change your display name
[58][ ] [59][ ] [60][Change]
This is the name that'll be displayed next to comments you make on kottke.org;
your email will not be displayed publicly. I'd encourage you to use your real
name (or at least your first name and last initial) but you can also pick
something that you go by when you participate in communities online. Choose
something durable and reasonably unique (not "Me" or "anon"). Please don't
change this often. No impersonation.
Note: I'm letting folks change their display names because the membership
service that kottke.org uses collects full names and I thought some people
might not want their names displayed publicly here. If it gets abused, I might
disable this feature.
×
If you feel like this comment goes against the grain of the [61]community
guidelines or is otherwise inappropriate, [62]please let me know and I will
take a look at it.
Hello! In order to leave a comment, you need to be a current kottke.org member.
If you'd like to sign up for a membership to support the site and join the
conversation, [63]you can explore your options here.
Existing members can [64]sign in here. If you're a former member, you can [65]
renew your membership.
Note: If you are a member and tried to log in, it didn't work, and now you're
stuck in a neverending login loop of death, try disabling any ad blockers or
extensions. Or try [66] logging out and then [67]back in. Still having trouble?
[68]Email me!
References:
[1] https://kottke.org/
[2] https://kottke.org/
[3] https://kottke.org/
[4] https://kottke.org/
[5] https://kottke.org/
[6] https://kottke.org/
[8] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_in
[9] https://kottke.org/
[10] https://kottke.org/members
[11] https://kottke.org/newsletter
[12] https://kottke.org/goods
[13] https://kottke.org/everfresh
[14] https://kottke.org/about
[16] http://carbonads.net/?utm_source=kottkeorg&utm_medium=ad_via_link&utm_campaign=in_unit&utm_term=carbon
[17] https://kottke.org/newsletter
[18] http://feeds.kottke.org/main
[19] https://bsky.app/profile/kottke.org
[20] https://mastodon.social/@kottke
[21] https://kottke.org/members
[22] https://www.arcustech.com/
[23] https://kottke.org/tag/burgers
[24] https://kottke.org/tag/death
[25] https://kottke.org/tag/photography
[26] https://kottke.org/tag/crying%20at%20work
[27] https://kottke.org/tag/black%20holes
[28] https://kottke.org/tag/Old%20Custer
[29] https://kottke.org/tag/film%20school
[30] https://kottke.org/tag/potatoes
[31] http://www.kottke.org/
[32] https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/this-life-gives-you-nothing
[33] https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/this-life-gives-you-nothing
[34] https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/this-life-gives-you-nothing
[36] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048058-on-reading-proust-vs-expe
[37] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048058-on-reading-proust-vs-expe
[38] https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&u=https%3A%2F%2Fkottke.org%2F25%2F12%2F0048058-on-reading-proust-vs-expe
[39] https://bsky.app/intent/compose?text=On%20reading%20Proust%20vs%20experiencing%20the%20world%20intermediated%20by%20screens%20%28even%20when%20you%27re%20not%20on%20one%29.%20%22Your%20attention%20is%2C%20on%20a%20foundational%20level%2C%20all%20you%20have.%20This%20is%20why%20it%20feels%20worse%20than%20bad%20to%20waste%20it.%20It%20feels%20annihilating.%22%20https%3A%2F%2Fkottke.org%2F25%2F12%2F0048058-on-reading-proust-vs-expe
[40] https://mastodonshare.com/?text=https%3A%2F%2Fkottke.org%2F25%2F12%2F0048058-on-reading-proust-vs-expe
[41] https://reddit.com/submit?url=https%3A%2F%2Fkottke.org%2F25%2F12%2F0048058-on-reading-proust-vs-expe
[42] https://threads.net/intent/post?text=On%20reading%20Proust%20vs%20experiencing%20the%20world%20intermediated%20by%20screens%20%28even%20when%20you%27re%20not%20on%20one%29.%20%22Your%20attention%20is%2C%20on%20a%20foundational%20level%2C%20all%20you%20have.%20This%20is%20why%20it%20feels%20worse%20than%20bad%20to%20waste%20it.%20It%20feels%20annihilating.%22%20https%3A%2F%2Fkottke.org%2F25%2F12%2F0048058-on-reading-proust-vs-expe
[43] https://kottke.org/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#aa95d9dfc8c0cfc9de97e9c2cfc9c18f989ac5dfde8f989adec2c3d98f989ac1c5dedec1cf84c5d8cd8f989adac5d9de8484848cc8c5ced397c2dededad98f99eb8f98ec8f98ecc1c5dedec1cf84c5d8cd8f98ec989f8f98ec9b988f98ec9a9a9e929a9f9287c5c487d8cfcbcec3c4cd87dad8c5dfd9de87dcd987cfd2dacf
[44] sms:?body=https%3A%2F%2Fkottke.org%2F25%2F12%2F0048058-on-reading-proust-vs-expe
[45] https://wa.me/?text=https%3A%2F%2Fkottke.org%2F25%2F12%2F0048058-on-reading-proust-vs-expe
[46] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048058-on-reading-proust-vs-expe#
[47] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048058-on-reading-proust-vs-expe#
[48] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048058-on-reading-proust-vs-expe#
[49] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048058-on-reading-proust-vs-expe#
[50] https://kottke.org/25/12/0048058-on-reading-proust-vs-expe#cmt-13630
[51] https://kottke.org/members
[52] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_in
[53] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_in
[54] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_out
[55] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_in
[56] https://kottke.org/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#92f8f3e1fdfcd2f9fde6e6f9f7bcfde0f5ade1e7f0f8f7f1e6aff9fde6e6f9f7bcfde0f5b2f4f7f7f6f0f3f1f9
[57] https://kottke.memberful.com/account/subscriptions
[61] https://kottke.org/threads/guidelines
[62] https://kottke.org/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#84eee5f7ebeac4efebf0f0efe1aaebf6e3bbf7f1e6eee1e7f0b9efebf0f0efe1aaebf6e3a4e2e8e5e3e3e1e0a4e7ebe9e9e1eaf0
[63] https://kottke.org/members
[64] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_in
[65] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_in
[66] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_out
[67] https://kottke.memberful.com/auth/sign_in
[68] https://kottke.org/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#bdd7dcced2d3fdd6d2c9c9d6d893d2cfda82cec8dfd7d8dec980d6d2c9c9d6d893d2cfda9ddbd8d8d9dfdcded6

File diff suppressed because it is too large Load Diff

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,751 @@
[1]
[2]Writing at Large
A blog about writing, sketching, running and other things
Primary Menu
• [3]The Cancer Project
• [4]About
My 2026 Q1 Planning and Moving to a New Planner
For the third year in a row Im using a Leuchtturm Bullet Journal as my
planner. This year its a dark green one. I dont use the bullet journal system
at all, but I like the paper and format enough to customise this notebook for
my own purposes.
A new year means moving into a new planner. I take the chance while moving in
to review the pages in my planner that didnt get used or that need be copied
into the new notebook, and decide which ones need to be copied and which ones
can stay behind or be migrated to my Obsidian app.
Planner Setup
I plan my year in four thirteen week quarters. You can read about it more [5]
here.
The Q1 plan starts at page 76 and ends at page 79. From page 80 to page 105 are
the first 13 weeks of double spreads on the left side is for the week, where
I write down the 7 days of the week with their dates, and on the right side is
where my weekly plan and goals go.
I use the 7 days a week planner part to map out my exercise plan (I run, swim
and lift weights), note events that I need to take into account in my weekly
plan (travel, meetings with friends, things that take large blocks of time or
require preparation). I usually dont fill the days here I have a google
calendar for my day to day planning and reminders, both at work and at home
but it is still useful for me to get an overview of the week ahead.
The interesting part is the right side of every weekly spread, where I plan my
tasks for the week. They are divided into headings and groups for ease of
reference, plus room for free text planning.
Every week has a detailed fitness plan but not too detailed so that I lose
too much flexibility. I just note that I want to get in 4-5 runs, 2 swims, 2
lifting sessions, 2 plyo sessions and however many stretching sessions.
I then note the “connections” I plan to invest time and effort into. This is
just a list of friends that I want to call, meet up in person or zoom with.
Texting doesnt count. Yes, I have to set this as a goal or life just gets in
the way and it doesnt happen. I neglected to do this in last years Q4 and I
really felt it. Everyone is busy and maintaining friendships requires planning,
time and effort and its WORTH it. So if its worth it, I need to treat it
with the same seriousness as anything else thats important to me.
Next comes the reading section, with my reading goals for the week. Again, if I
dont set these, my reading tends to be neglected in favour of less nourishing
pastimes.
Then come “tickers” for quarter specific goals. I wont get into these as they
are personal, but if you cant measure it even in the simplest of ways then
its not really a goal and you wont do it. “Yearly Themes” are for people who
stopped publishing on their YouTube channel and recording their podcasts. I
have learned again and again, especially during the latter part of 2025, that
if I dont set measurable goals, I just let myself off the hook and the result
isnt pretty.
One goal for Q1 that I am willing to share is getting off of social media
again, and focusing on finishing a challenging technical certification for
work. To get it done I need time, and cutting out Instagram, Facebook and
YouTube gives me 6 hours a week without too much effort.
Q1 2026 Plan
I had two wobbly quarters of planning in 2025. It was a rough year in general
war, upheaval at work, more war, more upheaval at work, some personal stuff,
lots of travel which meant that my routine and some of my habits took a
serious hit. I stopped reading for a while. I stopped journaling for a while
and then struggled to get back. By the end of the year I was back on track with
both habits, but still, 2025 was a wake up call that my quarterly plans need
some rethinking.
This years Q1 plan is a result of that thinking. Its still divided into areas
of focus, but the areas have changed a bit and have become narrower. They are:
Health and Fitness, Professional Development, Reading, Conversations,
Sketching, Blogging, Sleep, Journaling, Planning/Productivity, Money,
Decluttering, Mental Health, Other.
Each one has a detailed, achievable set of goals that are broken down by week.
The idea is that I can reference these much more often, and its easier to copy
them into my weekly task plan when the time comes. It took me much longer to
make this plan, but as Im closing week 1 of this quarter (I started on Sunday
the 28th of December) its already hugely paying off.
Setting goals is hard. Its easier to not set them, or to be vague and then
give up most of the time before youve even started. You want to read more?
Set a measurable goal, and if youre worried you might have a hard time with
it, make it tiered. For example: one or two easy books a month if you havent
read for years. Stretch to one easy book and one more difficult book. Then
stretch for more but track everything on daily or weekly basis. In case of my
reading for example, I aim for two chapters a day, or around 30-40 pages a day.
Some days I read more, some days I read less, but thats the average. It comes
out to around 4 books a month.
The Rest of the Planner
What about pages 1-75? Well theyre for general lists, trackers, brainstorming
my quarterly plans, etc.
I have a list of “Unread Books on My Kindle” currently containing 28 books.
The point is to get me reading the books that I buy, and not just buying them
(BTW I use a Kindle but Ive been buying books on Kobo for over a year).
“Mindful Consuming” is a list of movies and series that I want to watch
things that are worth taking the time to view, instead of mindlessly grazing on
algorithmically recommended slop.
“Conversations, Not Connections” is a list of friends that I want to make sure
I actually touch base with, instead of just liking their posts or sending texts
every once in a while. The list is there to encourage intention and not because
I might forget a friend. Look at it as sort of a contract or formal commitment.
“List of Courses that Ive Enrolled to” if youre like me, then youve
enrolled to more than one online course. The point is to track them all, and
make sure that I take the time to actually complete them. Until now I have had
a very low success rate, but the change in my plan for Q1 means that Ive
started more rigorously to carve out time for my courses, which means that Im
actually starting to make progress with this. The other goal of this list is to
make sure that I dont enrol to another course, because Ive got enough of
those right now.
“Punch List/Brain Dump” is just a running list of things that I want to get
to. It gets formalised later into either my daily to do, my weekly or quarterly
plan, or it gets deleted.
“Things from Abroad” a running list of shopping items that Im waiting to
receive. Serves a dual purpose to help me keep track of what I ordered, and
to stop me from ordering more stuff. With prices soaring lately, this has
become more important than ever.
“Q1 Prep” three pages of just freeform planning and brainstorming before I
came up with the 2026 Q1 plan. I plan on creating similar pages for the rest of
the three quarters of the year.
Thats it. There are no stickers in my planner, no highlighters, illustrations
and such. Its a practical tool for me. I wont photograph it for the blog or
social media because its so personal, and thats its job to work for me, not
to generate content or likes. It isnt pretty, but boy is it functional. I
reference it at least one or two time a day every day. From it stems my daily
to-do list, my weekly review, my long and short term plans. Its an investment
thats paid dividends over the years, and from what I can tell my new format
promises to pay me back even more.
I hope this helps you set up a similar planning system of your own. I recommend
creating one that fits your needs, rather than taking one that someone else
built for their needs. Theres nothing more personal than a persons planner
and a persons journal. Make it your own.
Have a great planning year!
Share this:
• [6] Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
• [7] Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
Like Loading...
Related
[8]journaling, [9]Life, [10]Notebooks, [11]Planners, [12]Productivity, [13]What
Im Using[14]writingatlarge[15]bullet journal, [16]fitness planning, [17]
journaling, [18]organizing, [19]planner, [20]planning, [21]reading-goals, [22]
to-do lists, [23]weekly planner, [24]weekly spread[25]3 comments
Post navigation
[26]Happy New Year! 2026 Edition
3 thoughts on “My 2026 Q1 Planning and Moving to a New Planner”
1. Alice's avatar
[27]Alice
[28]January 3, 2026 at 3:59 pm
Add pictures?
[29]LikeLiked by [30]1 person
[31]Reply
1. writingatlarge's avatar
[32]writingatlarge
[33]January 3, 2026 at 5:06 pm
Not to this one. Too personal to share.
[34]LikeLike
[35]Reply
1. Alice's avatar
[36]Alice
[37]January 3, 2026 at 6:23 pm
Fair enough
[38]LikeLiked by [39]1 person
Leave a comment [40]Cancel reply
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
Δ[ ]
Search [48][ ] Submit
Recent Posts
• [50]My 2026 Q1 Planning and Moving to a New Planner
• [51]Happy New Year! 2026 Edition
• [52]Diamine Inkvent 2025 Summary
• [53]Diamine Inkvent 2025 Day 25
• [54]Diamine Inkvent 2025 Day 24
Subscribe to Blog via Email
Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of
new posts by email.
Email Address: [55][ ]
Subscribe
Join 1,152 other subscribers
[63]Follow Writing at Large on WordPress.com
RSS Feed
• [64]RSS - Posts
Archives
• [65]January 2026
• [66]December 2025
• [67]November 2025
• [68]October 2025
• [69]September 2025
• [70]August 2025
• [71]July 2025
• [72]June 2025
• [73]May 2025
• [74]April 2025
• [75]March 2025
• [76]February 2025
• [77]January 2025
• [78]December 2024
• [79]November 2024
• [80]October 2024
• [81]September 2024
• [82]August 2024
• [83]July 2024
• [84]June 2024
• [85]May 2024
• [86]April 2024
• [87]March 2024
• [88]February 2024
• [89]January 2024
• [90]December 2023
• [91]November 2023
• [92]October 2023
• [93]September 2023
• [94]August 2023
• [95]July 2023
• [96]June 2023
• [97]May 2023
• [98]April 2023
• [99]March 2023
• [100]February 2023
• [101]January 2023
• [102]December 2022
• [103]November 2022
• [104]October 2022
• [105]September 2022
• [106]August 2022
• [107]July 2022
• [108]June 2022
• [109]May 2022
• [110]April 2022
• [111]March 2022
• [112]February 2022
• [113]January 2022
• [114]December 2021
• [115]November 2021
• [116]October 2021
• [117]September 2021
• [118]August 2021
• [119]July 2021
• [120]June 2021
• [121]May 2021
• [122]April 2021
• [123]March 2021
• [124]February 2021
• [125]January 2021
• [126]December 2020
• [127]November 2020
• [128]October 2020
• [129]September 2020
• [130]August 2020
• [131]July 2020
• [132]June 2020
• [133]May 2020
• [134]April 2020
• [135]March 2020
• [136]February 2020
• [137]January 2020
• [138]December 2019
• [139]November 2019
• [140]October 2019
• [141]September 2019
• [142]August 2019
• [143]July 2019
• [144]June 2019
• [145]May 2019
• [146]April 2019
• [147]March 2019
• [148]February 2019
• [149]January 2019
• [150]December 2018
• [151]November 2018
• [152]October 2018
• [153]September 2018
• [154]August 2018
• [155]July 2018
• [156]June 2018
• [157]May 2018
• [158]April 2018
• [159]March 2018
• [160]February 2018
• [161]January 2018
• [162]December 2017
• [163]November 2017
• [164]October 2017
• [165]August 2017
• [166]July 2017
• [167]June 2017
• [168]May 2017
• [169]April 2017
• [170]January 2017
• [171]December 2016
• [172]November 2016
• [173]October 2016
• [174]May 2016
• [175]April 2016
• [176]August 2015
• [177]July 2015
Tags
[178]architecture [179]art [180]beach [181]birds [182]book review [183]Books
[184]brush pen [185]cancer [186]cat [187]Diamine [188]Diamine Inkvent 2024
[189]Diamine Inkvent 2025 [190]Diamnine Black Edition [191]Drawing [192]faber
castell [193]Field Notes [194]fountain pen [195]Fountain Pens [196]Ink [197]
inktober [198]inktober2018 [199]inktober2019 [200]Inktober2022 [201]
inktober2023 [202]Inkvent [203]Inkvent2023 [204]Inkvent2025 [205]Inspiration
[206]journal [207]Journal Comic [208]journaling [209]leuchtturm1917 [210]Life
[211]London [212]Midori [213]Midori MD Cotton [214]moleskine [215]Notebooks
[216]OneWeek100People [217]pencil [218]Pencils [219]Pens [220]Photography [221]
Pilot [222]Reading [223]Recommendation [224]review [225]Rhodia [226]river [227]
Running [228]schminke [229]sea [230]sketch [231]sketchbook [232]Sketchbook
Design [233]sketching [234]Staedtler [235]Stillman and Birn [236]summer [237]
sunset [238]teddy bears [239]tel aviv [240]Tips [241]tomoe river paper [242]
Tournament of Books [243]uni-ball [244]urban sketchers [245]urban sketching
[246]vintage [247]watercolor [248]watercolour [249]Weekly Update [250]wildlife
[251]winter [252]Writing
Categories
• [253]Board Games
• [254]Boardgames
• [255]Book Reviews
• [256]cancer
• [257]Creating
• [258]D&D
• [259]Daily Doodle
• [260]Daily Sketch
• [261]Drawing
• [262]Ink
• [263]Inkvent
• [264]journal comics
• [265]journal sketch
• [266]journaling
• [267]knitting
• [268]Life
• [269]Mechanical Keyboards
• [270]Notebooks
• [271]On Cancer
• [272]One Week 100 People
• [273]Pencils
• [274]Pens
• [275]Photography
• [276]Planners
• [277]Productivity
• [278]Random Draw
• [279]Reading
• [280]Recommendations
• [281]Reviews
• [282]Running
• [283]Shopping from My Stationery Stash
• [284]Tea
• [285]Technology
• [286]The Cancer Project
• [287]Tournament of Books
• [288]Travel
• [289]Uncategorized
• [290]urban sketchers
• [291]vintage
• [292]Weekly Update
• [293]What Im Using
• [294]Writing
[295]Blog at WordPress.com.
• [296] Comment
• [297] Reblog
• [298] Subscribe [299] Subscribed
□ [300] [cropp] Writing at Large
Join 1,152 other subscribers
[301][ ]
Sign me up
□ Already have a WordPress.com account? [308]Log in now.
□ [309] [cropp] Writing at Large
□ [310] Subscribe [311] Subscribed
□ [312]Sign up
□ [313]Log in
□ [314] Copy shortlink
□ [315] Report this content
□ [316] View post in Reader
□ [317]Manage subscriptions
□ [318]Collapse this bar
%d
[b]
References:
[1] https://writingatlarge.com/
[2] https://writingatlarge.com/
[3] https://writingatlarge.com/the-cancer-project/
[4] https://writingatlarge.com/about/
[5] https://writingatlarge.com/2024/07/05/planning-update-how-i-plan-a-13-week-year/
[6] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/?share=twitter
[7] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/?share=facebook
[8] https://writingatlarge.com/category/journaling/
[9] https://writingatlarge.com/category/life/
[10] https://writingatlarge.com/category/notebooks/
[11] https://writingatlarge.com/category/planners/
[12] https://writingatlarge.com/category/productivity/
[13] https://writingatlarge.com/category/what-im-using/
[14] https://writingatlarge.com/author/writingatlarge/
[15] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/bullet-journal/
[16] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/fitness-planning/
[17] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/journaling/
[18] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/organizing/
[19] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/planner/
[20] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/planning/
[21] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/reading-goals/
[22] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/to-do-lists/
[23] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/weekly-planner/
[24] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/weekly-spread/
[25] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/#comments
[26] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/01/happy-new-year-2026-edition/
[27] https://malhammagna.com/
[28] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/#comment-9284
[29] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/?like_comment=9284&_wpnonce=612235c3f5
[30] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/#
[31] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/?replytocom=9284#respond
[32] https://writingatlarge.wordpress.com/
[33] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/#comment-9289
[34] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/?like_comment=9289&_wpnonce=a0a70ed1bf
[35] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/?replytocom=9289#respond
[36] https://malhammagna.com/
[37] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/#comment-9290
[38] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/?like_comment=9290&_wpnonce=88b2008dc1
[39] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/#
[40] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/#respond
[50] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/
[51] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/01/happy-new-year-2026-edition/
[52] https://writingatlarge.com/2025/12/27/diamine-inkvent-2025-summary/
[53] https://writingatlarge.com/2025/12/25/diamine-inkvent-2025-day-25/
[54] https://writingatlarge.com/2025/12/24/diamine-inkvent-2025-day-24/
[63] https://writingatlarge.com/
[64] https://writingatlarge.com/feed/
[65] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/
[66] https://writingatlarge.com/2025/12/
[67] https://writingatlarge.com/2025/11/
[68] https://writingatlarge.com/2025/10/
[69] https://writingatlarge.com/2025/09/
[70] https://writingatlarge.com/2025/08/
[71] https://writingatlarge.com/2025/07/
[72] https://writingatlarge.com/2025/06/
[73] https://writingatlarge.com/2025/05/
[74] https://writingatlarge.com/2025/04/
[75] https://writingatlarge.com/2025/03/
[76] https://writingatlarge.com/2025/02/
[77] https://writingatlarge.com/2025/01/
[78] https://writingatlarge.com/2024/12/
[79] https://writingatlarge.com/2024/11/
[80] https://writingatlarge.com/2024/10/
[81] https://writingatlarge.com/2024/09/
[82] https://writingatlarge.com/2024/08/
[83] https://writingatlarge.com/2024/07/
[84] https://writingatlarge.com/2024/06/
[85] https://writingatlarge.com/2024/05/
[86] https://writingatlarge.com/2024/04/
[87] https://writingatlarge.com/2024/03/
[88] https://writingatlarge.com/2024/02/
[89] https://writingatlarge.com/2024/01/
[90] https://writingatlarge.com/2023/12/
[91] https://writingatlarge.com/2023/11/
[92] https://writingatlarge.com/2023/10/
[93] https://writingatlarge.com/2023/09/
[94] https://writingatlarge.com/2023/08/
[95] https://writingatlarge.com/2023/07/
[96] https://writingatlarge.com/2023/06/
[97] https://writingatlarge.com/2023/05/
[98] https://writingatlarge.com/2023/04/
[99] https://writingatlarge.com/2023/03/
[100] https://writingatlarge.com/2023/02/
[101] https://writingatlarge.com/2023/01/
[102] https://writingatlarge.com/2022/12/
[103] https://writingatlarge.com/2022/11/
[104] https://writingatlarge.com/2022/10/
[105] https://writingatlarge.com/2022/09/
[106] https://writingatlarge.com/2022/08/
[107] https://writingatlarge.com/2022/07/
[108] https://writingatlarge.com/2022/06/
[109] https://writingatlarge.com/2022/05/
[110] https://writingatlarge.com/2022/04/
[111] https://writingatlarge.com/2022/03/
[112] https://writingatlarge.com/2022/02/
[113] https://writingatlarge.com/2022/01/
[114] https://writingatlarge.com/2021/12/
[115] https://writingatlarge.com/2021/11/
[116] https://writingatlarge.com/2021/10/
[117] https://writingatlarge.com/2021/09/
[118] https://writingatlarge.com/2021/08/
[119] https://writingatlarge.com/2021/07/
[120] https://writingatlarge.com/2021/06/
[121] https://writingatlarge.com/2021/05/
[122] https://writingatlarge.com/2021/04/
[123] https://writingatlarge.com/2021/03/
[124] https://writingatlarge.com/2021/02/
[125] https://writingatlarge.com/2021/01/
[126] https://writingatlarge.com/2020/12/
[127] https://writingatlarge.com/2020/11/
[128] https://writingatlarge.com/2020/10/
[129] https://writingatlarge.com/2020/09/
[130] https://writingatlarge.com/2020/08/
[131] https://writingatlarge.com/2020/07/
[132] https://writingatlarge.com/2020/06/
[133] https://writingatlarge.com/2020/05/
[134] https://writingatlarge.com/2020/04/
[135] https://writingatlarge.com/2020/03/
[136] https://writingatlarge.com/2020/02/
[137] https://writingatlarge.com/2020/01/
[138] https://writingatlarge.com/2019/12/
[139] https://writingatlarge.com/2019/11/
[140] https://writingatlarge.com/2019/10/
[141] https://writingatlarge.com/2019/09/
[142] https://writingatlarge.com/2019/08/
[143] https://writingatlarge.com/2019/07/
[144] https://writingatlarge.com/2019/06/
[145] https://writingatlarge.com/2019/05/
[146] https://writingatlarge.com/2019/04/
[147] https://writingatlarge.com/2019/03/
[148] https://writingatlarge.com/2019/02/
[149] https://writingatlarge.com/2019/01/
[150] https://writingatlarge.com/2018/12/
[151] https://writingatlarge.com/2018/11/
[152] https://writingatlarge.com/2018/10/
[153] https://writingatlarge.com/2018/09/
[154] https://writingatlarge.com/2018/08/
[155] https://writingatlarge.com/2018/07/
[156] https://writingatlarge.com/2018/06/
[157] https://writingatlarge.com/2018/05/
[158] https://writingatlarge.com/2018/04/
[159] https://writingatlarge.com/2018/03/
[160] https://writingatlarge.com/2018/02/
[161] https://writingatlarge.com/2018/01/
[162] https://writingatlarge.com/2017/12/
[163] https://writingatlarge.com/2017/11/
[164] https://writingatlarge.com/2017/10/
[165] https://writingatlarge.com/2017/08/
[166] https://writingatlarge.com/2017/07/
[167] https://writingatlarge.com/2017/06/
[168] https://writingatlarge.com/2017/05/
[169] https://writingatlarge.com/2017/04/
[170] https://writingatlarge.com/2017/01/
[171] https://writingatlarge.com/2016/12/
[172] https://writingatlarge.com/2016/11/
[173] https://writingatlarge.com/2016/10/
[174] https://writingatlarge.com/2016/05/
[175] https://writingatlarge.com/2016/04/
[176] https://writingatlarge.com/2015/08/
[177] https://writingatlarge.com/2015/07/
[178] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/architecture/
[179] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/art/
[180] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/beach/
[181] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/birds/
[182] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/book-review/
[183] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/books/
[184] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/brush-pen/
[185] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/cancer/
[186] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/cat/
[187] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/diamine/
[188] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/diamine-inkvent-2024/
[189] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/diamine-inkvent-2025/
[190] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/diamnine-black-edition/
[191] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/drawing/
[192] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/faber-castell/
[193] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/field-notes/
[194] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/fountain-pen/
[195] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/fountain-pens/
[196] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/ink/
[197] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/inktober/
[198] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/inktober2018/
[199] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/inktober2019/
[200] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/inktober2022/
[201] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/inktober2023/
[202] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/inkvent/
[203] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/inkvent2023/
[204] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/inkvent2025/
[205] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/inspiration/
[206] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/journal/
[207] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/journal-comic/
[208] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/journaling/
[209] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/leuchtturm1917/
[210] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/life/
[211] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/london/
[212] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/midori/
[213] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/midori-md-cotton/
[214] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/moleskine/
[215] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/notebooks/
[216] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/oneweek100people/
[217] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/pencil/
[218] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/pencils/
[219] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/pens/
[220] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/photography/
[221] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/pilot/
[222] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/reading/
[223] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/recommendation/
[224] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/review/
[225] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/rhodia/
[226] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/river/
[227] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/running/
[228] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/schminke/
[229] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/sea/
[230] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/sketch/
[231] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/sketchbook/
[232] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/sketchbook-design/
[233] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/sketching/
[234] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/staedtler/
[235] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/stillman-and-birn/
[236] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/summer/
[237] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/sunset/
[238] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/teddy-bears/
[239] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/tel-aviv/
[240] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/tips/
[241] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/tomoe-river-paper/
[242] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/tournament-of-books/
[243] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/uni-ball/
[244] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/urban-sketchers/
[245] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/urban-sketching/
[246] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/vintage/
[247] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/watercolor/
[248] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/watercolour/
[249] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/weekly-update/
[250] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/wildlife/
[251] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/winter/
[252] https://writingatlarge.com/tag/writing/
[253] https://writingatlarge.com/category/board-games/
[254] https://writingatlarge.com/category/boardgames/
[255] https://writingatlarge.com/category/book-reviews/
[256] https://writingatlarge.com/category/cancer/
[257] https://writingatlarge.com/category/creating/
[258] https://writingatlarge.com/category/dd/
[259] https://writingatlarge.com/category/daily-doodle/
[260] https://writingatlarge.com/category/daily-sketch/
[261] https://writingatlarge.com/category/drawing/
[262] https://writingatlarge.com/category/ink/
[263] https://writingatlarge.com/category/ink/inkvent/
[264] https://writingatlarge.com/category/journal-comics/
[265] https://writingatlarge.com/category/journal-sketch/
[266] https://writingatlarge.com/category/journaling/
[267] https://writingatlarge.com/category/knitting/
[268] https://writingatlarge.com/category/life/
[269] https://writingatlarge.com/category/mechanical-keyboards/
[270] https://writingatlarge.com/category/notebooks/
[271] https://writingatlarge.com/category/on-cancer/
[272] https://writingatlarge.com/category/drawing/one-week-100-people/
[273] https://writingatlarge.com/category/pencils/
[274] https://writingatlarge.com/category/pens/
[275] https://writingatlarge.com/category/photography/
[276] https://writingatlarge.com/category/planners/
[277] https://writingatlarge.com/category/productivity/
[278] https://writingatlarge.com/category/random-draw/
[279] https://writingatlarge.com/category/reading/
[280] https://writingatlarge.com/category/recommendations/
[281] https://writingatlarge.com/category/reviews/
[282] https://writingatlarge.com/category/running/
[283] https://writingatlarge.com/category/shopping-from-my-stationery-stash/
[284] https://writingatlarge.com/category/tea/
[285] https://writingatlarge.com/category/technology/
[286] https://writingatlarge.com/category/the-cancer-project/
[287] https://writingatlarge.com/category/reading/tournament-of-books/
[288] https://writingatlarge.com/category/travel/
[289] https://writingatlarge.com/category/uncategorized/
[290] https://writingatlarge.com/category/urban-sketchers/
[291] https://writingatlarge.com/category/vintage/
[292] https://writingatlarge.com/category/weekly-update/
[293] https://writingatlarge.com/category/what-im-using/
[294] https://writingatlarge.com/category/writing/
[295] https://wordpress.com/?ref=footer_blog
[296] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/#comments
[297] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/
[298] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/
[299] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/
[300] https://writingatlarge.com/
[308] https://wordpress.com/log-in?redirect_to=https%3A%2F%2Fr-login.wordpress.com%2Fremote-login.php%3Faction%3Dlink%26back%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fwritingatlarge.com%252F2026%252F01%252F03%252Fmy-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner%252F
[309] https://writingatlarge.com/
[310] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/
[311] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/
[312] https://wordpress.com/start/
[313] https://wordpress.com/log-in?redirect_to=https%3A%2F%2Fr-login.wordpress.com%2Fremote-login.php%3Faction%3Dlink%26back%3Dhttps%253A%252F%252Fwritingatlarge.com%252F2026%252F01%252F03%252Fmy-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner%252F
[314] https://wp.me/p6skqj-2JZ
[315] https://wordpress.com/abuse/?report_url=https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/
[316] https://wordpress.com/reader/blogs/95409711/posts/10539
[317] https://subscribe.wordpress.com/
[318] https://writingatlarge.com/2026/01/03/my-2026-q1-planning-and-moving-to-a-new-planner/

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,500 @@
[1]
Blackbird Spyplane
[2]Blackbird Spyplane
SubscribeSign in
This life gives you nothing
Your attention is all you have. Wasting it is annihilating. Blackbird Spyplane
saves literacy in a monumental Year-End Essay.
Dec 16, 2025
1,211
77
230
Share
Blackbird Spyplane exists thanks to our readers.
We dont run any ads, we dont use affiliate links on new clothes, we dont do
any spon. Youre the only people we owe anything, so we keep some of our best
material for Classified Tier Subscribers.
Upgrade today if you havent yet, support greatness and enjoy a better life in
the inner sanctum — Jonah & Erin
[21][ ]
Subscribe
[23]
[https]
Blackbird Spyplane for the Worlds Public Libraries
Our interviews with Nathan Fielder, Sarah Squirm, Cameron Winter and Geese,
Adam Sandler, Brendan from Turnstile, Patrick Radden Keefe, MJ Lenderman, Evan
Kinori, Maya Hawke, Bon Iver, André 3000, Sandy Liang, Matty Matheson, Laraaji,
Ryota Iwai from Auralee, Tyler, The Creator, John C. Reilly, Father John Misty,
Kate Berlant, Clairo, Steven Yeun, Conner OMalley & more are [26]here.
Check out our monumental new list of the [27]50 Slappiest Shops across the
Spyplane Universe.
Our brand-new G.I.F.T.S. List is [28]here.
2025 was The Jackets Year — the 21 best are [29]here.
[30]
[https]
1 — All is full of Screen
A disconcerting question strikes me alarmingly often these days. Ill be out in
the world, and Ill see something … lets call it picturesque. Say Im walking
along a nature trail as a white wall of fog avalanches over a ridge, down a
canyon of pine and oak, toward the blue waters of the Bay. I will find myself
thinking, “My god, that is beautiful.” And then — even if I manage to keep my
phone in my pocket, resisting whats become a powerful instinct to reach for it
— I will feel a strange tremor of uncertainty: “Am I looking at a screen right
now?” I wonder.
In the moment, this uncertainty is not fully articulated, nor, thankfully, does
it emerge from some extreme delusional state where Ive lost my hold on
reality. Its more of a pre-cognitive kind of category confusion. And at the
core of the confusion is this: As my life has come to consist so
overwhelmingly, and for so many years, of looking at images on screens — and of
looking at the world through a camera, which is also a phone, which is also a
screen — the distinction for me between the screen and the non-screen can
wobble.
I still know the difference intellectually. But I dont always necessarily feel
it. That is the disconcerting part. I stare at the hillside, try to pick out
individual details and weave them into a living, breathing totality that also
includes the cool air on my skin and the birdsong in my ears. As I do this, I
tell myself, “This is a real place, this is not an image of a place,” and I
repeat that a few times, trying to will back the border dividing the two.
[33]
[https]
Heres how I make sense of this wobble between world and image.
For a time, when I was much more active on Twitter than I am now, Id find
myself, e.g., washing dishes and, without wanting to, thinking about various
mundane things in the form of tweets. Some nascent half-kernel of an idea would
come to me and, like a hack comedian for whom every banal thing is material, I
would immediately start working it over for any and all tweet-like potential.
Maybe there was a tiny bit of dish soap left at the bottom of the bottle, and I
considered diluting it with water to get it out more easily, and make the
bottle last longer. I wouldnt simply think that. Thanks to Twitter, Id think
something exponentially more inane and annoying, such as, “The masculine urge
to water down the dish soap…” or “The two genders [picture of brand-new dish
soap vs. picture of old diluted dish soap]…” or “Choose your fighter [same two
pictures again]…” or “Wake up babe, new diluted dish soap just dropped,” or
“Men will dilute the last millimeter of dish soap rather than go to therapy…”
or “No but the way I just diluted the dish soap…”
And so on. Just cycling through a procession of dumb, Twitter-borne
phraseologies as they ran through my head, like a radio on the fritz skipping
stations. It was a bit like I was idly playing a “brain teaser” puzzle, and a
bit like my brains were oozing out of my ears. Id spent so many hours of so
many days reading tweets — encountering other peoples thoughts filtered
through the specific character limits and idiomatic conventions of that site —
that the seams between my own experiences, thoughts, and tweets began, on some
level, to delaminate.
I worry that something analogous has happened in my relationship to looking.
The same way that an idea would occur to me and Id immediately reach for a
Stock Twitter Phrase to give it form, whenever I see anything that interests me
now, theres a looming sense in which my phone is there with me, framing and
constituting the sight, even if I never post the picture, even if I never look
at it again and, weirdest of all, even if dont take out my phone.
The same way I once conditioned myself to think in tweets, Ive conditioned
myself to see in “posts,” in “grid pics,” in “stories,” in flicks texted to the
group chat, in .HEICs, and so on.
This is the underside of what people mean when they describe an extremely
“sticky” piece of technology: It can stick to you, like the facehugger from
Alien, even when youre not using it.
[36]
[https]
How to get yourself unstuck?
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
2 — Your attention is all you have
One afternoon this fall I found myself “thinking in Instagram reels.”
I had an idea for a video I wanted to make for the Spyplane IG, which I hoped
people would find funny. The premise isnt worth describing except to say it
involved me reading from some book broadly coded as “smart,” as a prop. I
scanned our shelves for something that fit the bill, until my eye landed on
Swanns Way.
I dont know how Erin and I came to own this copy, but weve had it for ages.
Id never read it, nor had she. That didnt matter: This was a perfect “smart
book” for the video I wanted to spend the next ~hour improvising, shooting and
editing. I pulled the novel down and started searching for a passage that
sounded appropriately “high-flown.”
And it was at this point that I enjoyed two unexpected, interconnected
revelations. The first was that the opening pages of Swanns Way are beautiful
and captivatingly trippy. The second was that I did not want to die, whenever
that day comes, having made an IG reel with a throwaway punchline about Proust,
but not having actually read any Proust.
Theres a lot of talk these days about the death of literacy. No one reads,
videos eating everything, weve grown stupid, and our alienation from written
language is only making us stupider.
For me, this isnt distant, theoretical hand-wringing. I feel it firsthand, in
the erosion of my own ability to concentrate on a piece of writing of any
significant seriousness and length.
I am, of course, not alone in this. Our attention has been transformed into one
of the few remaining reliable “growth markets” by a parasite economy much
better suited to sucking and siphoning than it is to building new things. This
means that everything wants to get into our eyeballs, and it goes without
saying that there are far more effective technologies for getting in peoples
eyeballs — and turning a profit there — than books.
But your attention is, on a foundational level, all you have. This is why it
feels worse than bad to waste it. It feels annihilating.
And so I decided not to make an IG reel, and instead, to finally read Swanns
Way.
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
3 — Magical mornings with the anti-phone
Every morning for ~6 weeks, from late September to early November, I got out of
bed early, put on some coffee, and sat with Proust for an hour or so in the
quiet of predawn.
I moved slowly. The sentences in Swanns Way are long, at times comically so:
stuffed with asides, nested clauses, digressions, and spiraling detours into
metaphor. There might be all of three sentences on a given page, and it was not
uncommon for me to make it through just 10 pages in the course of that predawn
hour.
This was fine with me, because the point wasnt to burn through the book at
1.5x speed. The point was to sink into it, to stretch out, and along the way,
to remind myself that Im an adult and my attention is my own.
In that light, Proust was perfect for the job. Swanns Way requires total
concentration. If your mind wanders 1/6th of the way through a sentence, you
will lose your bearings, and the sentence will spit you out. And yet the book
isnt punishing or difficult in the way of Ulysses or Derrida. It just moves at
its own speed, and if you decelerate, and lock in, its a delight.
The story takes place in the 19th century, and unfolds at the speed of carriage
rides, long walks through the countryside, and letters dispatched across Paris.
There is no immediacy in it, or at least much less than were used to. There is
a plot, but the book is less about that than about trying to render the
experience of being alive in language as vividly, granularly, abundantly,
comprehensively and encompassingly as possible.
Theres an extravagance of words, devoted to capturing interior and external
life in detail, whether its the way a shaft of sunshine looks as it passes
through the windows of a provincial church and lands on a patch of stone, or
the foolish, contradictory behavior of a man who grows infatuated with a woman
he does not seem to love, and who does not seem to love him, either. (I read
[39]this translation.)
[40]
[https]
To actually read Swanns Way, it was necessary that I start the day with it,
and that I didnt look at my phone first under any circumstances. Getting in
some scrolling beforehand would have been like waking up before sunrise,
driving to the gym, and then saying, “Ill just eat this box of donut holes
before I get on the treadmill.” Nothing doing. On the few days when I made this
mistake — thinking, against my better judgment, Ill just check the weather
real quick — the spell was broken, I was still on the phone 40 minutes later,
and my concentration was shot. I couldnt get any traction when I tried to
switch over to the novel, if I managed to pick it up at all.
Despite the gym metaphor, I dont want to instrumentalize reading into
something you should do for “gains.” You need absolutely no reason to immerse
yourself in a great book beyond the vast intrinsic pleasure of doing so.
But in my case I was reading Swanns Way not only for that pleasure, but also
because phones have trained my brain to work in a way I dont like, and I
wanted to re-train myself: To rebuild my capacity for sustained attention like
a muscle, to diminish the desire to scroll, to reclaim time spent within
myself, uncoerced, undistracted, imagining and creating, in the particular way
that only happens when youre reading.
[43]
[https]
This hour of predawn Swann time became a ritual I depended on and eagerly
looked forward to. You can analogize it to runners high, you can analogize it
to core strength, but at the end of the hour, I came away with something more
than just my normal nagging feelings of dissatisfaction with the way the
internet organizes our thoughts. Id done a set of Proust reps to failure —
something actively pleasing, and actively fortifying, that would be with me for
the rest of the day.
Blackbird Spyplane is a subscriber-powered, spon-free independent miracle.
Upgrade to our Classified Tier today, support greatness, and enjoy a better
life instantly in the inner sanctum — Jonah & Erin
[56][ ]
Subscribe
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
4 — The good in flicking up everything
Why do we pull out our phones at concerts instead of just watching the show?
Why do we pull them out at the beach instead of just watching the sunset?
I dont think its because weve become automatons. I think the widespread
impulse to take a photo of everything is in fact, at root, a creative one. It
reflects a desire to not just receive life passively, but to intervene in it
creatively: To frame the shot, to find the most compelling angle, to draw out
the emotion, to honor the light… to participate.
The problem is that the cameraphone, connected as it is to our online lives,
doesnt just serve the creative impulse and stop there. It risks cannibalizing
that impulse, co-opting it, colonizing it, and ultimately thwarting it. Because
the cameraphone allows us so readily to stop noticing the thing were
photographing, and instead to outsource our experience of experiencing to the
phone, much like weve outsourced our sense of direction to Google Maps.
Whats more, when you start shooting video at the concert, your experience of
watching [58]Spyfriend Cameron Winter perform in real time is captured and
subordinated by your desire to commemorate that experience for some vaguely
imagined Future You, and/or to post the footage for the benefit of some vaguely
imagined Impressed Other People.
This ultimately makes you more absent, and less present, to your life. And yet,
again, I suspect that trying to rack up faves on a pic stems from something
wonderful, which is our communal urge to share our experiences with other
people: Are you guys seeing this sunset??
Our appetite for life is so big that living just one life doesnt always feel
like enough. We want to know what other peoples lives are like, and we want
other people to live some of our lives, too.
[59]
[https]
A book is, we know, an unrivaled technology for living more life.
The contemporary internet-abetted image, on the other hand, is a highly potent
yet f--ked-up technology for living more life. It comes with all kinds of
strings attached, and it has a way of leaving us feeling lonely, lacking,
unsatisfied, and jittery.
This is not thanks to creeping moral rot on our parts. Quite the contrary, its
because these feelings of loneliness and dissatisfaction serve the twisted
prerogatives of the people who design and make money from the technology
sucking up our attention.
And those are not the prerogatives of people who write great books.
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
5 — The remedy
When I felt my thoughts morphing into tweets, the remedy was to spend less time
on Twitter. The remedy for seeing everything as a digital image of itself is,
similarly, to see less screen.
Avoiding screen is harder to do than avoiding a single app, but there are ways.
Early one morning in early November, I finished Swanns Way. I sat there in its
afterglow for a while, looking out a window. I was at a house on the Sonoma
coast, where the sunrise was pushing through the fog, which itself pushed
through a stand of redwoods. I didnt need to assure myself that this sight was
real and not a screen. The book had left me in a state similar to one Ive
enjoyed on psychedelics: my attention felt focused, even as my mind was free to
wander.
It felt good to sit there and let thoughts blossom slowly, and instead of
taking a picture of the redwoods, the way Id normally do, I wrote down what I
saw as I looked at them: the drops of water clustered in the boughs, the
particles that drifted past in dense enough concentration that they counted as
“fog” but were also perceptible as individual instances of moisture. Grains of
sand, and also the beach, at once.
Then I took a picture, which, when I consult it now, looks dramatically
different from what I saw, and from what I remember.
[62]
[https]
Every morning since then, Ive continued the ritual of waking up early and
devoting an hour or so to reading before the day begins — and, very
importantly, before looking at any screens.
I moved on from Proust to Karl Ove Knausgaards famous My Struggle novels,
which Ive been meaning to read for more than a decade, and which felt like a
good segue for a few reasons. Knausgaard is overwhelmingly concerned with
memory, and he applies an abundance of language to capturing quotidian
experience and expansive insights alike.
In the second book of the series, set in the mid-2000s, theres a passage where
he writes about settling into the sofa with his wife to watch a DVD. His real
subject is attention:
…we wanted to be entertained. And it had to be with as little effort and
inconvenience as possible. It was the same with everything. I hardly read
books anymore; if there was a newspaper around I would prefer to read that.
And the threshold just kept rising. It was idiotic because this life gave
you nothing, it only made time pass. If we saw a good film it stirred us
and set things in motion, for that is how it is, the world is always the
same, it is the way we view it that changes.
Twenty years later, things are the same, but more so. The threshold just keeps
rising. And it is worse than idiotic, because not only does this life gives you
nothing, not only does it make time pass — it steals life from you.
In his books, Knausgaard often finds himself among other people, wishing he was
alone. Proust, for his part, was a severely asthmatic child, this left him
frail into adulthood, and by the time he wrote Swanns Way hed largely
withdrawn from society, sticking to his rooms and writing. This isolation may
have been maddening and painful — you need to spend time chopping it up with
the f--king homies to thrive. But it also cleared the field for his imagination
to flower, for him to dig into himself, open himself up and, in so doing, to
push outward. In other words, by writing, he broke confinement.
Today we are all of us lonelier, and more alone, than ever. But were never
alone, either, because our attention is hijacked, our time feels crunched, and
our cells travel with us everywhere we go, padded with layer upon layer of
endless, overlapping digital distractions. The Goon Cave is becoming lifes
organizing principle.
And yet I know we still have more time on our hands than we realize: our phones
take lots of it from us, yes, but theres lots of time we surrender to our
phones, too. Weve grown accustomed to filling our time with scrolling because
scrolling is diabolically easy. We can find ways to engineer away some of that
scrolling, however, and replace it with things that do not merely distract us
but speak far more resonantly to the questions were trying to ask when we
start scrolling in the first place.
When we do this, we dont just find ourselves with more time on our hands, but
with more life on our hands, too. Because we set things back in motion. The
world remains the same, but the way we see it changes.
P🌅E🌅A🌅C🌅E until next time,
Jonah & Erin
[75][ ]
Subscribe
[77]Leave a comment
1,211
77
230
Share
Discussion about this post
CommentsRestacks
User's avatar
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[85]
Marcy Thompson's avatar
[86]Marcy Thompson
[87]Dec 16
A couple of days ago, I sang Handel's Messiah with a local church choir. I'm
not religious, but I am a former chorus nerd; it had become part of my past,
and I missed it. So, for a few weeks I rehearsed with the choir, learned the
part, and refamiliarized myself with what it means to sing with a group. The
concert on Sunday was glorious: a room full of human beings singing, playing
gorgeous instruments, responding to each other synchronously in a collective
effort to bring to life something that was written almost 300 years ago. It was
a thrill. Later, I realized I hadn't taken a single photo of my time with the
choir, I had no recording of the event. And, although I was initially saddened
by that, I realized that -- instead -- I actually had the music I had sung at
the concert playing in my ears. A most beautiful kind of reminder.
Here's to having more life on our hands.
Expand full comment
Reply
Share
[89]1 reply by Blackbird Spyplane
[90]
shonni's avatar
[91]shonni
[92]Dec 16
Hey Jonah, thanks for this truly great piece. Im the chair of the English
Department at Fordham and a longtime BBSP subscriber (and have actually taught
BBSP pieces to students for a few years now in a course on fashion and
literature). We actually just revised our vision for our department to center
“the arts of attention: reading, writing, conversation.” Would it be possible
for me to share this piece with our English majors? Appreciate the
consideration.
Expand full comment
Reply
Share
[94]1 reply by Blackbird Spyplane
[95]75 more comments...
TopLatestDiscussions
No posts
Ready for more?
[110][ ]
Subscribe
© 2026 Blackbird Spyplane Inc. · [112]Privacy ∙ [113]Terms ∙ [114]Collection
notice
[115] Start your Substack[116]Get the app
[117]Substack is the home for great culture
This site requires JavaScript to run correctly. Please [118]turn on JavaScript
or unblock scripts
References:
[1] https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/
[2] https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/
[23] https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!-pUp!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F48146675-4653-4f0b-a8d0-d266c8af498a_1271x1571.png
[26] https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/the-blackbird-spyplane-interview
[27] https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/the-35-slappiest-clothing-shops
[28] https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/2025-blackbird-spyplane-gifts-list-gratitude-edition
[29] https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/the-year-jackets-rocked-again
[30] https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!3pkc!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F99573365-8f85-498c-85f5-fd3d3a689296_1208x493.png
[33] https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!Blep!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F820d5f12-c70c-49c9-9a74-c01053e244c6_232x412.gif
[36] https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!eZXY!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Fc42f0738-f3b8-42b7-95ca-2ead9bbefaa7_500x281.gif
[39] https://bookshop.org/a/32497/9780375751547
[40] https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!2hex!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Fec4f87df-ed2c-4e01-bced-198cd44b595f_2000x2596.png
[43] https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!necs!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F5fdc0f8d-adc1-489e-a0e8-c36dc3ff6501_1208x529.png
[58] https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/cameron-winter-interview-geese-the-urge-to-respond
[59] https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!ItcB!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F215f56da-54d2-4173-8a40-367270729441_1208x493.png
[62] https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!LAKB!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F0992988a-c49a-4cfa-8d0b-e7c8b2875a72_2000x2649.png
[77] https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/this-life-gives-you-nothing/comments
[85] https://substack.com/profile/2725960-marcy-thompson?utm_source=comment
[86] https://substack.com/profile/2725960-marcy-thompson?utm_source=substack-feed-item
[87] https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/this-life-gives-you-nothing/comment/188413875
[89] https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/this-life-gives-you-nothing/comment/188413875
[90] https://substack.com/profile/802405-shonni?utm_source=comment
[91] https://substack.com/profile/802405-shonni?utm_source=substack-feed-item
[92] https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/this-life-gives-you-nothing/comment/188414352
[94] https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/this-life-gives-you-nothing/comment/188414352
[95] https://www.blackbirdspyplane.com/p/this-life-gives-you-nothing/comments
[112] https://substack.com/privacy
[113] https://substack.com/tos
[114] https://substack.com/ccpa#personal-data-collected
[115] https://substack.com/signup?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=web&utm_content=footer
[116] https://substack.com/app/app-store-redirect?utm_campaign=app-marketing&utm_content=web-footer-button
[117] https://substack.com/
[118] https://enable-javascript.com/

View File

@@ -0,0 +1,204 @@
[1] Westenberg.
• [4]Home
• [5]About
• [6]Upgrade
• [7]RSS
• [8]Products / Tools
• [9]Book Notes
• [10]YouTube
• [11]Permissionless
[13]Sign in [14]Subscribe
15 Dec 2025 4 min read
Thin Desires Are Eating Your Life
Thin Desires Are Eating Your Life
Photo by [15]Alexis Fauvet / [16]Unsplash
The defining experience of our age seems to be hunger.
We're hungry for more, but we have more than we need.
We're hungry for less, while more accumulates and multiplies.
We're hungry and we don't have words to articulate why.
We're hungry, and we're lacking and we're wanting.
We are living with a near-universal thin desire: wanting something that cannot
actually be gotten, that we can't define, from a source that has no interest in
providing it.
The distinction between thick and thin desires isn't original to me.
Philosophers have been circling this territory for decades, from Charles
Taylor's work on frameworks of meaning to Agnes Callard's more recent writing
on aspiration.
But the version I find most useful is simple:
A thick desire is one that changes you in the process of pursuing it.
A thin desire is one that doesn't.
The desire to understand calculus versus the desire to check your notifications
are both real desires, and both produce (to a degree) real feelings of
satisfaction when fulfilled.
But the person who spends a year learning calculus becomes someone different,
someone who can see patterns in the world that were previously invisible, who
has expanded the range of things they're capable of caring about, who has Been
Through It.
The person who checks their notifications is, afterward, exactly the same
person who wanted to check their notifications five minutes ago.
The thin desire reproduces itself without remainder.
The thick desire transforms its host.
I want to be careful here because this is a claim that can easily slide into
unfalsifiable grumpiness about Kids These Days.
But there's a version of it that I think is both true and important.
The business model of most consumer technology is to identify some thick
desire, find the part of it that produces a neurological reward, and then
deliver that reward without the rest of the package.
Social media gives you the feeling of social connection without the obligations
of actual friendship.
Pornography gives you sexual satisfaction without the vulnerability of
partnership.
Productivity apps give you the feeling of accomplishment without anything being
accomplished.
In each case, the thin version is easier to deliver at scale, easier to
monetize, and easier to make addictive.
The result is a diet of pure sensation.
And none of it seems to be making anyone happier.
The surveys all point the same direction: rising anxiety, rising depression,
rising rates of loneliness even as we've never been more connected.
How could this be, when we've gotten so good at giving people what they want?
Maybe because we've gotten good at giving people what they want in a way that
prevents them from wanting anything worth having.
Thick desires are inconvenient.
They take years to cultivate and can't be satisfied on demand.
The desire to master a craft, to read slowly, to be embedded in a genuine
community, to understand your place in some tradition larger than yourself:
these desires are effortful to acquire and impossible to fully gratify.
They embed you in webs of obligation and reciprocity.
They make you dependent on specific people and places.
From the perspective of a frictionless global marketplace, all of this is pure
inefficiency.
And so the infrastructure for thick desires has been gradually dismantled.
The workshops closed, the congregations thinned, the apprenticeships
disappeared, the front porches gave way to backyard decks and studio apartments
and the coveted Micro Homes where you could be alone with your devices.
Meanwhile the infrastructure for thin desires became essentially inescapable.
It's in your pocket right now.
Grand programs to Rebuild Community or Restore Meaning seem to founder on the
same logic they're trying to escape.
The thick life doesn't scale.
That's the whole point.
So: bake bread.
The yeast doesn't care about your schedule.
The dough will rise when it rises, indifferent to your optimization.
You'll spend an afternoon doing something that cannot be made faster, producing
something that you could have bought for four dollars, and in the process
you'll recover some capacity for patience that the attention economy has been
methodically stripping away.
Write a letter, by hand, on paper.
Send it through the mail.
The letter will take days to arrive and you won't be able to unsend it or edit
it or track whether it was opened.
You're creating a communication that exists outside the logic of engagement
metrics, a small artifact that refuses to be optimized.
Code a tool for exactly one person.
Solve your friend's specific problem with their specific workflow.
Build something that will never scale, never be monetized, never attract users.
The entire economy of software assumes that code should serve millions to
justify its existence.
Making something for an audience of one is a beautiful heresy.
None of this will reverse the great thinning.
But I've started to suspect that the thick life might be worth pursuing anyway,
on its own terms, without needing to become a movement.
The person who bakes bread isn't trying to fix the world. They're not making
any attempt to either dent or undent the universe.
They're trying to spend a Sunday afternoon in a way that doesn't leave them
feeling emptied out.
They're remembering, one loaf at a time, what it feels like to want something
that's actually worth wanting.
[17]
Published by:
[18] JA Westenberg
[19]
Westenberg. © 2026
• [20]Sign up
[21]Powered by Ghost
References:
[1] https://www.joanwestenberg.com/
[4] https://www.joanwestenberg.com/
[5] https://www.joanwestenberg.com/about/
[6] https://www.joanwestenberg.com/#/portal/account/plans
[7] https://www.joanwestenberg.com/rss/
[8] https://westenberg.gumroad.com/
[9] https://www.joanwestenberg.com/tag/book-notes/
[10] https://www.youtube.com/@jawestenberg
[11] https://westenberg.gumroad.com/l/ylekeo
[13] https://www.joanwestenberg.com/thin-desires-are-eating-your-life/#/portal/signin
[14] https://www.joanwestenberg.com/thin-desires-are-eating-your-life/#/portal/signup
[15] https://unsplash.com/@childeye?utm_source=ghost&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=api-credit
[16] https://unsplash.com/?utm_source=ghost&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=api-credit
[17] https://www.joanwestenberg.com/growth-is-a-poor-mans-god/
[18] https://www.joanwestenberg.com/author/jawestenberg/
[19] https://www.joanwestenberg.com/uh-oh-the-infantilization-of-failure/
[20] https://www.joanwestenberg.com/thin-desires-are-eating-your-life/#/portal/
[21] https://ghost.org/