[copy] This is a test story
April 25, 2023
Perhaps one of the best habits that I’ve picked up and sustained in 2020 is the art of bullet journaling. Now that I’m a few months in, my journal has since become a trusty sidekick, the daily ritual of its care and feeding now an essential, calming practice. Journaling is how I both start and end my day. It is how I reflect on the activities of the previous week, the highs and lows of the previous month, how I track all of my tasks and todos and remember important events.
First, paper is approachable in a way that a blank screen is not. It is disposable. It invites mark-making, doodling, folding, crumpling and tossing. Something about the tangiblity of paper feels less intimidating during those tenuous first moments when you’re trying to coax your mind to focus and action. \
This is a Heading 1
This is a Heading 1 but bolder
This is a Heading 2
A few days ago I watched a panel conversation put together by Mario Gabriele of The Generalist on independent research, tools for thought and internet academia. The conversation opens with the question: “What is your favorite tool for thought?” Several of the panelists respond by sharing favorite analog tools—reams of dot-matrix printer paper, four-color pens, books, post-it notes. When any panelist did share a digital tool—Are.na or Google Scholar, for instance—it was a tool used for purposes of information gathering and organization rather than creating, assembling, drawing, searching for patterns, the hard work of thought.
A few days ago I watched a panel conversation put together by Mario Gabriele of The Generalist on independent research, tools for thought and internet academia. The conversation opens with the question: “What is your favorite tool for thought?” Several of the panelists respond by sharing favorite analog tools—reams of dot-matrix printer paper, four-color pens, books, post-it notes. When any panelist did share a digital tool—Are.na or Google Scholar, for instance—it was a tool used for purposes of information gathering and organization rather than creating, assembling, drawing, searching for patterns, the hard work of thought.
This is a default paragraph.
- This is an ordered list
- This is an ordered list
- This is an ordered list
A right-aligned ordered list looks like this
- This is an ordered list
- This is an ordered list
- This is an ordered list
This is a default paragraph.
- This is an unordered list
- This is an unordered list
- This is an unordered list
A right-aligned unordered list looks like this
- This is an unordered list
- This is an unordered list
- This is an unordered list
And a center-aligned list
- This is an unordered list
- This is an unordered list
- This is an unordered list
- This is an unordered list
- This is an unordered list
- This is an unordered list
A few days ago I watched a panel conversation put together by Mario Gabriele of The Generalist on independent research, tools for thought and internet academia. The conversation opens with the question: “What is your favorite tool for thought?” Several of the panelists respond by sharing favorite analog tools—reams of dot-matrix printer paper, four-color pens, books, post-it notes. When any panelist did share a digital tool—Are.na or Google Scholar, for instance—it was a tool used for purposes of information gathering and organization rather than creating, assembling, drawing, searching for patterns, the hard work of thought.
Make sure alignments working
Here's a center-aligned heading
And here a center-aligned paragraph just to confirm we have the expected results And here a center-aligned paragraph just to confirm we have the expected results And here a center-aligned paragraph just to confirm we have the expected results And here a center-aligned paragraph just to confirm we have the expected results And here a center-aligned paragraph just to confirm we have the expected results
Here's a right-aligned heading
This is a right-aligned paragraph just to test things out This is a right-aligned paragraph just to test things out This is a right-aligned paragraph just to test things out This is a right-aligned paragraph just to test things out This is a right-aligned paragraph just to test things out
Incidental duplication is code that looks
the same but represents
different behaviors in the system
prezly contact_%_export.xlsx
XLSX - 10 Kb