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Field Notes

What I learned from a year of walking

Three hundred and sixty-five days, one slow route, and a small notebook. A report from the pavement.

Mira Iwasaki·286 字·1 分钟

Walking is the cheapest form of research and the most reliable. It rearranges the furniture of the mind.

The quiet shape of an idea

There is a particular kind of pleasure in returning to a piece of writing after it has had time to settle. The sentences look at you differently. Some have grown weightier. Others, weightless, ask to be removed entirely.

Most of what I write begins as a small observation — a single image, an overheard phrase, a question that refuses to leave. I keep these in a plain text file and let them sit for as long as they need.

The best ideas are patient. They do not announce themselves; they accumulate.

Working in the open

Working in public is a deliberate constraint. It changes the kinds of decisions you make and the speed at which you make them. It is not, as is sometimes claimed, simply a marketing tactic.

A shorter feedback loop

The most useful effect is the shorter loop between intention and response. A piece published this morning may be read by a hundred people before lunch, and a thoughtful reply will arrive that reshapes the next draft.

  • Write first, edit later — but never publish without editing.
  • Trust the reader’s intelligence. Cut anything that explains too much.
  • Prefer the concrete to the abstract.

A note on tools

The tools matter less than people imagine, but they matter. A good editor disappears. A bad one inserts itself between you and the thought you were chasing.

// a small helper I keep returning to
const words = (text) => text.trim().split(/\s+/).filter(Boolean).length;

Closing

If there is a single thread running through these notes, it is this: do the work, do it slowly, and let it be plain. Readers will meet you the rest of the way.

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