Beside the silence and complete privacy, as there is no algorithm tracking my every word while I'm writing, no EULA telling me what I'm allowed to write about, no assistant telling me what word I should not be using, imperfection is one of the reasons I much prefer drafting longhand, using a fountain pen or a pencil. Also, it feels nice to write longhand using decent paper and a decent fountain pen (or with a pencil).
When I look at one of my draft, even much later, my messy handwriting, as well as my my custom shorthand notation and the many mistakes I always do, they make it clear it's mine, uniquely so—like being at home, with all its imperfections and quirks we learn to live with, if not to like.
Related to that, there is an idea I've been toying with for a while: rekindling the exchange of manuscript documents between us. Quite obviously, typescripts would be fine too. Just nothing computerized.
I mean, exchanging good old letters & postcards (snail mail), journals, fictions, poems, essays, sketches and why not even photography (printed, digital or not, just without any 'smartphonery' involved). Stuff we would then have circulating among a group of us.
It was something a couple friends and I were doing, back in the late 80s mid-90s. We were mostly exchanging letters. It was intense (we all received enough snail mail to quickly become friend with our respective postmen who all seemed to enjoy looking at our stupid mail art too ;)), like it was intensely enjoyable and (intellectually/artistically) stimulating.
The three main issues I can think of, trying to do that today would be:
- to convince people it's worth spending a lot more of their (already limited) time doing so, instead of rushing to their email/text editor/word processor/social media/video editor—AI-powered, or not—to instantly share it worldwide. Instantly getting feedback, too. Because this immediate feedback & validation is a though opponent to any kind of slow-paced work and activity.
- Find a way to ensure privacy. Aka, no sharing on social media and no doxxing either.
Keeping the group small and each one accountable would be OK-ish, at least to begin with. - Find a safe way to share one's personal address safely and securely in this age of digital weirdos—would not want anyone to be prematurely 'ended' by the same kind of lunatics roaming the Internet that seem to think it's OK to go shoot people whose ideas or values they disagree with.
PO Box could be a solution but they're not always an option: here in France for example, in big cities at least, it's almost impossible to get one for an individual customer.
What do you think? Am I completely out touch with reality (I probably would not object to that) or is it something you think would be worth trying to set up... instead of keeping feeding those AIs (and their corporate owners) by sharing our content where we know they are feasting on? Content they then are more than willing to sell back to us.