This semester is in full gear, and I’m scrambling to keep up with various deadlines while also prepping for a couple of conferences I’m presenting at in March and May. Lately, it’s begun to feel like a never-ending game of whack-a-mole. I get one thing done, breathe a sigh of relief, and then realize the house is metaphorically burning down. That being said, after a first semester of just adapting to CU Boulder, this semester I have been able to dig back into my own research, which is very joy-inducing. I’ve been exploring the history of cultural studies and media studies in South Africa, reading extensively about the ethics of going to Mars, and formulating an upcoming project that involves WestworldSo I may be exhausted, but it’s been awhile since I’ve been this happy.

Research aside, I want to dedicate this post to something less intellectual but certainly useful–my new favorite “gadget.” If you’ve followed my blog for a while, you probably know I’m a huge fan of technology that supports analog practices. My mom knows that especially and snagged me an amazing Christmas present this past December. I’ve been holding off on posting about it to check and see if my infatuation would last longer than a few weeks. Well I am no longer infatuated; this is true love.

The Rocketbook Wave looks deceptively like just a regular notebook, but it’s so much more. It’s an erasable and reusable notebook and a digitally archivable notebook. What does that mean? Well to begin, the notebook is designed to be used with Pilot Frixion pens. Under regular circumstances, these pens can be erased like you would erase a pencil marking–with an eraser on the end. When used with the Rocketbook Wave, instead of rubbing out text, once you have filled out the entire notebook, you simply place the notebook in the microwave and after a few minutes, the ink fades and the notebook is good as new. Reusable.

The notebook is also compatible with an app that can quickly capture each page and send it directly to the cloud storage of your choice. Each page is outlined with a thick black border that helps the app pick up the edges of each page no matter the surface beneath. The QR code registers the page number so you don’t have to snap the pages in order. And the symbols at the bottom of the page, when checked off in pen, correlate to distinct cloud storage locations of your own designation. For myself personally, each symbol is associated with a different Evernote notebook. All I need to do is hold my phone over a page when I’m finished writing, and in a second it’s duplicated online. Digitally archived.

There are some notes that I like to keep permanent analog copies of. (You should never trust digital alone. It is not without flaw.) For instance, all of my class notes are stored in Moleskines and carefully archived according to semester, in addition to being digitally duplicated on Evernote. However, I also attend a lot of meetings and events, and for those types of scenarios, I am fine with just a digital record. Ten years from now, I won’t be too perturbed if I can’t find the notes from that department meeting I had to attend. But in the short-term, those notes are valuable and they take up space. The Rocketbook Wave ends up being the perfect solution for all those miscellaneous note-taking needs.

I know I sound like somebody paid me to write this review. I promise they didn’t. I’m just passionately obsessed with this notebook. It’s already somewhat battered because I take it everywhere with me. My cohort members have had to hear me yak on about it, as have many others.

I’ve heard through the grapevine that apparently they’re releasing an even more impressive option later this year–I’ll keep you updated on that front. But in the meantime, you can order one through Amazon, and if you want to learn more about it, PCMag did a pretty comprehensive review of it. Just a reminder that Amazon gives me kickbacks whenever you purchase something on their site after entering the site through a link on my page. You don’t even have to buy the thing that I linked to; I get kickbacks simply because you followed the link and bought something. The kickbacks aren’t much, but I do use what little I get to help maintain this site. 

Most importantly though, I want to hear from y’all if you try the notebook out. How do you use it? Do you like it? Are there other similar tools that you prefer? For instance, someone mentioned to me that there’s a whiteboard notebook on the market too. Let me know in the comments!

I write all my blog posts in my Moleskine. In fact, when I walk into my classes, I walk in armed with just my readings, some pens, and that same Moleskine. The only time I bring a screen into class is (a) when the readings are in PDF format on my iPad or (b) if I’m leading class and using Powerpoint.

Hand paginated and divided into three sections with sticky tabs for easy navigation.
My Moleskine: Hand paginated and divided into three sections with sticky tabs for easy navigation.

This is a recent development. For the majority of the past 5 or 6 years, I have dedicated myself to finding the best app for everything in order to maximize my time and productivity. And I still do that, but my overall perspective and philosophy of the digital has changed significantly, and it continues to change as I wrestle daily with what an appropriate relationship with technology looks like.

This is part of a very familiar conversation: digital vs. analog. Which is better? Is one better? What is technology doing to our minds? It reminds me of the cyclical dialogue regarding red wine–a constant tug back and forth as we humans try to determine if this thing we love is good for us or not. I don’t want to reinvent the wheel and regurgitate the same arguments that circulate our society, but as I’ve recently found myself drifting back to more analog tools, I have been trying to get to the bottom of why I personally am shifting my habits.

The real clincher for me was about a month ago when a friend showed me her new planner. I have never used a planner, and while I was a Moleskine fan at that point, I couldn’t understand why she would ignore the incredible digital tools out there for organizing your life. Which I of course lectured her about. (Great friend I am . . .) Turns out, she does use them–in addition to her planner. My internal monologue in response to that was one of “What a waste of paper and time, but whatever floats her boat”, but as the week went on, I found myself thinking about that beautiful carefully designed planner.

Screen Shot 2015-10-15 at 6.29.27 PM

And I wanted one.

A month later, I still use the same digital organization tools such as Omnifocus, Google Calendar, and Trello to plan my life, but that planner has become one of my most beloved possessions. Why??
This question has been driving me crazy too, but I recently had a small epiphany. I think my love of the planner, and my Moleskine, and analog in general has something to do with time and space. For millennia, humanity has lived in one time zone and one geographic location. If a person wanted to be elsewhere, they had to physically move themselves. Today, however, the Internet and other technologies have compressed the distance between time zones and geographic locations. At any given moment, I can transport myself virtually through a tool like Skype or Periscope to another country where it will likely be a different time of day or night. Shopping online, I know I can order something from my home country, South Africa, and it will be on my doorstep next week here in the U.S.. While this capability is exciting and empowering, it is also likely exhausting. Humanity, in a sense, is “on call” 24/7. Patterns of sleeping when it’s dark outside can no longer be taken for granted. Our digital devices put us on a global stage where the demands of performativity across all sorts of Internet platforms from social media to traditional email, forums, and work chat are ridiculously high. The blue glare of the screen as we wake our devices has a Pavlovian trigger reminding us of our duties to the world.

But when I sit cross-legged on my sofa, planner or Moleskine in hand, it’s just me and a piece of paper, in one location at one particular time. Everyone and everything else is shut out. It is in those moments that I can catch a breath and center myself.

Analog, while potentially more time-consuming and less efficient, brings us back to the present and grounds us in our immediate environments, allowing there to be just one of us–even if just for a little while.

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