The Five Minute Journal -- Japanese Edition
April 11, 2020, 10:00 PM
Here's a translation of the questions used in the Five Minute Journal more >>
it's been a little over a month now...
April 11, 2020, 10:30 AM
... since I decided to start changing my habits. more >>
intersection observer as a react hook
April 9, 2020, 7:00 AM
Use an intersection observer to determine the visibility of an element in a browser window. more >>
what's the end game, really?
April 4, 2020, 9:30 AM
welcome to the trials and tribulations of attempting to change my life. more >>
a week in review and some such.
March 28, 2020, 10:15 AM
I'd like to say that a lot happened. But not much did, really. more >>
my leg hurts
March 21, 2020, 11:00 AM
Historically, I've been unconcerned with my health. At least, until recently. more >>
deleting a user and their home directory in ubuntu
March 16, 2020, 7:00 AM
nefarious users putting questionable contents on my server shall be smoted. more >>
About writing, according to Haruki Murakami
March 8, 2020, 12:00 AM
Writing novels, to me, is basically a kind of manual labor. Writing itself is mental labor, but finishing an entire book is closer to manual labor. It doesn’t involve heavy lifting, running fast, or leaping high. Most people, though, only see the surface reality of writing and think of writers as involved in quiet, intellectual work done in their study. If you have the strength to lift a coffee cup, they figure, you can write a novel. But once you try your hand at it, you soon find that it isn’t as peaceful a job as it seems. The whole process—sitting at your desk, focusing your mind like a laser beam, imagining something out of a blank horizon, creating a story, selecting the right words, one by one, keeping the whole flow of the story on track—requires far more energy, over a long period, than most people ever imagine. You might not move your body around, but there’s grueling, dynamic labor going on inside you. Everybody uses their mind when they think. But a writer puts on an outfit called narrative and thinks with his entire being; and for the novelist that process requires putting into play all your physical reserve, often to the point of overexertion.