Before my discovery of Moleskine notebooks I gathered my thoughts in a hodgepodge of blank books bound in everything from leather to corduroy. The journals are a motley crew, but they served the purpose, which was connecting the dots, remembering, as Joan Didion wrote, "how it felt to be me."
Sometimes I dip into them for a fact: When exactly did I leave for that trip to Yugoslavia? How long did I work for the lovable but crazy family on West 94th Street? But I always read more than I intended.
The other day, I discovered an encounter I had with a singing chicken. The "chicken" had been hired to serenade a friend and colleague on her birthday. My job was to meet the chicken and escort him to my friend's desk. In his other life, the actor who took on this second job was playing Theseus in a production of "A Midsummer Night's Dream." Or at least that's what he told us.
You can't make this stuff up. But, if you're lucky, sometimes you write it down.