THERE IS ALWAYS THE PERSONAL SATISFACTION OF WRITING DOWN ONE'S EXPERIENCES...
“There is, of course,
always the personal satisfaction of writing down one's experiences so they may
be saved, caught and pinned under glass, hoarded against the winter of
forgetfulness. Time has been cheated a little, at least in one's own life, and
a personal, trivial immortality of an old self assured. And there is another
personal satisfaction: that of the people who like to recount their adventures,
the diary-keepers, the story-tellers, the letter-writers, a strange race of
people who feel half cheated of an experience unless it is retold. It does not
really exist until it is
put into words. As though a little doubting or dull,
they could not see it until it is repeated. For, paradoxically enough, the more
unreal an experience becomes - translated from real action into unreal words,
dead symbols for life itself - the more vivid it grows. Not only does it seem
more vivid, but its essential core becomes clearer. One says excitedly to an
audience, 'Do you see - I can't tell you how strange it was - we all of us
felt...' although actually, at the time of incident, one was not conscious of
such a feeling, and only became so in the retelling. It is as inexplicable as
looking all afternoon at a gray stone of a beach, and not realizing, until one
tries to put it on canvas, that is in reality bright blue.”