Today, we are seeing an increase in the number of people who write daily. In a diary book, we write down what we did today, at what time, on what date, so that we can easily find out what we did, what we did wrong, what we did wrong, what time we did it, and what time we met. ,. The habit of writing a diary has many benefits in our lives so we feel it is important for everyone to have a diary writing habit and based on that we have tried to put this article among you today and we are hopeful that it will help you to learn a lot. . This article is for educational purposes only. This article or section needs sources or references that appear in credible, third-party publications. daily diary writing examples
Daily diary writing or diary writing has been playing a special role in the world literary, political, social and cultural environment. A typical writer, politician, social worker, employee, industrialist, philosopher, scientist, etc. can all write a diary, so its literary significance is not only visible. When a person who has been successful in any field publishes his daily notes, it seems that his historical significance has remained in the field of world literature or politics. Although writing a diary is not a very special thing, because of the social prestige, national height and international image of the writer’s personality, the diary also has a special significance. Although the style of writing is the same, there is a fundamental difference in the format of diary and daily diary writing taught and taught in school. It is more informal than the planned diary prepared as a textbook as it has more influence of narrative subject and writer personality than writing art. This article provides theoretical and creative information about diary writing with the same historical value and importance.
According to Sanskrit grammar, the word ‘daily’, formed by adding the suffix ‘ek’ to the word ‘din’ formed from the process of formation of ‘do (di) + nak’, means day, day, day after day. In the same word ‘Dainik’, the word ‘Dainiki’ formed by suffixing ‘Nip (E)’ has a general meaning of day, while in a specific literary context it refers to a specific art, special creation or special genre formed from the notes of daily events. Looking at the construction process, the diary word formed from the process of ‘dyuti tamah do (di) + nak + ik + nip (e)’ refers to a specific poto of writing. In the literary departmental context, it refers to a work to be written by considering each day as the center of the subject or event and giving it both informative and entertaining form.
This is why it is called Diary Writing in the western world. The word diary, derived from the Latin word diarium, means daily facilities provided to workers. This means that it seems to have expanded and reached the diary. At present, this diary is associated with writing and is called diary writing. Its importance seems to be not only in the literary field but also in various fields. In the western world, diary writing was started with the intention of not publishing in the beginning. While keeping a diary of your experiences, experiences and information, you will find the fact that it has taken the form of a unique creation.
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The word diary was first used in 1605. At that time it was used for keeping records of daily accounts. Prior to 1800, it was customary to make daily notes on trade and agriculture. In addition, religious believers used to mention in their diaries the repentance from their evil deeds. John Evelyn’s The Diary of John Evelyn, published in 1818, is considered to be the world’s first published diary. Due to its popularity, diary publishing doubled in 1820, exactly two years after its publication, and flourished for 20 years after 1830. At the same time, writers started writing novels in the form of diaries. Samuel Richardson’s ‘Pamela’ and Emily Bronte’s ‘Woodring Heights’ are considered to be notable novels written in diary format. Its importance is not only in the context of diary writing but also in the context of world famous novels. Then there are the diaries of Charles Darbin, Leonardo da Vinci, Marie Curie, Winston Churchill, Marco Polo, and Anne Frank.
In this way, the diaries of political, literary, philosophical and social personalities of every country have historical significance. In India, diaries of Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, etc., and in Bangladesh, works like Sheikh Mujibur Rahman’s ‘Prison Diary of Bangabandhu’ seem to have historical significance. In Nepal, works like Bishweshwar Prasad Koirala’s ‘Jail Journal’ and Shyam Prasad Sharma’s ‘Thunuwa’s Diary’ have been of special importance in the political and literary arena.
Critic Netra Atom says that the power of diary is the self-awareness of a person and the rapid vitality of time and place. Explaining its creative significance, he sDear Diary: how keeping a journal can bring you daily peace
Me and my thoughts: ‘There’s a lot about music in mine, and loads of gossip, much of it indefensible. There is also a fair bit about football.’ Anthony Quinn in his garden with some of his old diaries. Photograph: Antonio Olmos/The Observer
Me and my thoughts: ‘There’s a lot about music in mine, and loads of gossip, much of it indefensible. There is also a fair bit about football.’ Anthony Quinn in his garden with some of his old diaries. Photograph: Antonio Olmos/The Observer
I still get funny looks from people when I mention that I keep a diary. Maybe the practice strikes them as shifty or weirdly old-fashioned. It’s true that I never feel more furtive than when my wife finds me writing it at our kitchen table – it’s like being spotted entering a confessional box in church. What exactly have I got to tell this black book about a life that we share all day, every day? What secrets can I possibly be keeping?
The answer: nothing of any great note, and yet so much of my life is in it. I started writing a journal (as I used to call it) when I went on holiday. Twenty years ago I decided to go full-time and since then I’ve kept it more or less every day. Why? I suppose it began as an experiment – and became an obligation. You can’t hold back time, but you can try to save the past from being completely erased. It often feels trivial to record things as they happen (a stray remark, hearing a song, fleeting moments of doom or delight), but later they may prove useful, or instructive, or amusing. It also maintains the illusion of diligence – that you’re not just pissing away the days. A diary is good exercise for the writing muscle, the way a pianist practises scales or a footballer does keepy-uppies. During lockdown, like everyone else, I got into routines that felt numbing in their repetition and diary-wise left me short of material. I took recourse to discussing the books and box sets I was involved with – not exactly Pepysian, but it got me through.
Which prompts the question: who are you writing for? Ultimately, it’s yourself. Diary-writing is the most private form of literary creation because you are both the author and (for the present at least) the sole reader. There are great advantages to this. The first is the benefit to your mental health. The diary is a safety-valve in an age of invasive scrutiny. I should admit that I have never been on social media and don’t own a mobile phone. (Yeah, I know). Much better to confide your unworthy or unrepeatable thoughts to that book on your desk than pin them up for everyone to read online. There is no fear of being trolled or cancelled when you only write for yourself and you won’t have to live out your regret in public. Is there anything quite so pathetic in social-media manners as the line “They later deleted the tweet”?
Even the greats have used their diary as a psychological prop. James Boswell, often prey to insecurity and low spirits, would address himself in his journal in the second-person, as if he were his own mentor. Studying law as a young man in Utrecht in September 1763, he writes: “Try and be shaved and dressed by nine… Read much privately and continue firm to plan… Resolve now no more billiards. Be not hasty to take music master, and consult Count Nassau about concert. Be frugal, calm and happy, and get wine soon.” I love that last bit.
The second is more to do with existential curiosity: the long perspective of diary-writing furnishes a picture not just of what you did but of who you were. To read diaries of old is to chart the progression of the self – “the varieties of ourselves”, as Penelope Lively puts it – as it changes through time. Sometimes I happen on a diary entry from years ago and think, in genuine surprise: did I write that? If it weren’t in my handwriting I would be inclined to doubt it. We evolve, we slough off old selves and acquire new ones, and yet some essential core in us persists, a cast of mind. Memory will play us false about our past, will blur the nuances or miscarry the meaning; a diary, while not infallible, can at least claim: “I was there at the time.”
A third important advantage of the diary is as an aide-memoire to your work. History does the broad sweep of years and decades. Biography does the intricate detail of character and incident. Diaries do both of these jobs, somewhat inadvertently, and may be mined for material thereafter. Certain seismic events are noted in mine, though aside from the odd pandemic and election result there’s not much “hand of history” stuff going on there – that’s not why I write it. I have some sympathy for Louis XVI returning from hunting on the day the Bastille fell and writing in his diary, “Rien”.
Source:
https://www.kps54.com.np/2022/01/Theoretical%20form%20and%20tradition%20of%20diary.html?m=1
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2021/aug/21/dear-diary-how-keeping-a-journal-can-bring-you-daily-peace