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Lewis and Clark's journals |
By Marilyn Turk
Many years ago after the birth of my first child, I
desperately wanted to stay home with him instead of returning to my job with a
Fortune 500 company. My dream was to someday become a writer, and being a loyal
reader of Guideposts Magazine, I hoped my dream would be realized there.
Yes, I was naive about the real-life possibility of
supporting myself as a writer as soon as I quit my day job. But one of the
Guideposts writers, Marion Bond West, lived relatively close to me, so I called
her and asked her how to get started writing for Guideposts. I’m sure Marion
thought I was the most naive person she had ever talked to, but she very
gracious and explained to me the improbability of my making the transition
instantly. I was terribly disillusioned, but then she suggested I keep a
journal. I remembered her wise advice that I should keep my day job for the
time-being, but begin writing a journal as a starting point for my writing
career. So I did, feeling like I’d taken the first step in my writing career.
Thirty years later those journals sit on a shelf in my
office, and their content may never see the light of day, but they’re valuable,
and this is why. They reveal to me the feelings, the angst, the worries I had
as a young mother and wife. I recently read that someone who had kept journals
all her life decided to burn them because she didn’t want her children to read
her travails. However, for the time being, I don’t want to get rid of mine
because they provide real emotions that I can put into the characters in my
books.
As a writer of historical novels, I’m so thankful for those
who kept journals in the past because they provide such a window into the world
they lived in. I’ll never forget listening to some audio diaries of pioneer
women on the wagon trains going west. What hardship they endured! Now, I have a
clear picture in my mind of what it was like for a woman in those conditions.
For most historic eras, there's been at least one journal
keeper whose writing we’ve used to understand the past. For my World War II
novels, I’ve found wonderful journals by men and women during those years telling
how their life was affected and what they did during the war. What a wealth of
information they are.
Many famous people kept journals. For example, Mark Twain
(Samuel Clemens) carried a pocket notebook at all times, noting everything from
how to operate a riverboat to the politics of his time. In his lifetime, he
filled over fifty notebooks with his observations. His leather-bound notebooks
were custom-made from his own design. Each page had a tab, and as each page was
used, he tore off the tab, making it easy for him to find his place.
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Beethoven with journal |
Others who kept journals were Albert Einstein, Madame Curie,
Thomas Edison, Lewis and Clark, George S. Patton, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin
Franklin, Ludwig Von Beethoven, Ernest Hemingway, Isaac Newton, Ralph Waldo
Emerson, and Leonardo Da Vinci, to name a few.
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George S. Patton's journal |
Wasn’t Dr. Luke the physician a journaler? His reports as he
accompanied the apostle Paul on his missionary journeys has provided us with
most of the New Testament.
How I wish my grandparents had left journals. I’d love to
know more about their lives, especially since I only knew them when they were
elderly.
One thing I’ve come to realize is that what we may see as commonplace
in our lives today maybe be unique and different to future generations. They
may regard what was normal to us as interesting as it is for us to read pioneer
diaries now.
Have you ever kept a journal?
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Leonardo Da Vinci's journal |