The daybook was helpful because I could percolate without putting it down in complete sentences. When words go on the screen, they are revised and edited. When words go in my daybook, there are mostly lists of things to do, diagrams of connected ideas, words in bubbles. Writing into the day usually led me to a poem where I could justify just making a list and not being coherent. The daybook allows my right brain to get involved. This showed me that I really need to journal more often for creative writing purposes too. Sometimes the screen is a little too much white. At least the daybook already has pages filled before it. At least in a daybook I have begun before I actually begin. Another word for writing in the daybook: Plogging. Not just blogging on paper, but also pre-blogging. Blogging comes from the word web log. Cut out the B and you get Pre-Logging. A blog is just a log, a report of experience. Nothing profound, just a collection of memories and experiences. However, the act of logging the memories changes the texture of experience itself.