Photos, journalist, audio recordings, video, blogging, printing photos, making music, posting online etc…
How do you record certain events? Make a journal entry? Just keep it in your memory to yourself?
How do you trust you wont forget the small details that you know today?
How do you trust the security of your documented life? your journal, your printed photos?
You you like analogue or digital documentation? Do you store data on HHDs? (they have a ~30 year lifespan) Mdisk? Photos? Pen and Paper?
Childhood memories? How do you view these archives?
Do you even believe in documenting the events of your life? Is it important to you? The quicker you write down an event, the more emotion you can convey.
What do you do and don’t do?
I basically don’t. I take some photos on occasion but I don’t have any routine. Although this post has made me think about it.
Obsidian daily notes . Typicly only events of significance recorded , otherwise tꝏ much effort documenting every single thing (did|happened) each day
Each daily note entry’s timestamped using QuickAdd plugin
I don’t. It’s very rare I want to remember something forever.
It is presumptuous to assume that my life is important enough to need documentation.
All the AI companies would beg to differ
Won’t somebody think of the tech moguls?
I write a journal and recently i have been organizing my photo archive with embedded captions, tags, gps, etc…
I dont think anyone will ever care to read this stuff. Maybe some llm in the future will be able to digest all of this so a curious descendant might be able to ask questions to it like what did Terminal do for work or some such thing.
I mostly don’t. Maybe this isn’t the kind of answer you were interested in. I think memorable experiences are transient and are more beautiful the more fleeting they are. The more I try to immortalize some moment, the less I feel I’m able to enjoy it in the moment. There are some exceptions. I keep recipes in Google keep. Most of them I just know how to make but I might need my memory jogged for a measurement or temp setting. I also have a small notebook I use as a gym journal. “Journalling” seems like a stretch for the chicken-scratch numbers, though. It’s mostly so I know how much weight to use next time I go.
I have a personal MediaWiki installation on my computer (same software as Wikipedia). Been running it since 2022. Most recent offsite backup is from the start of December. I also have a very Wikipedia-like writing style as a result, too.
Any of my descendants, if they will ever exist, will probably have a great time going through great-grandpa’s writings 🙂
screenshot of Special:Statistics. WARNING: LIGHT MODE

The pages figure doesn’t sound as impressive when you realize a lot of them are templates imported from Wikipedia lol
Hell, this month I made it into a Kiwix Zim file that I can read when away, but of course that doesn’t support writing to it, so I sometimes write in a physical logbook when I’m away from my computer
I’ll take pics sometimes. 🤷
I use a digital journal (Logseq) backed by write-only git repositories, syncthing and the 3-2-1 backup rule. This contains info about my days, struggles, friends and family and regular introspection.
Photos and videos usually get carried over from one phone to the other, synced with my home server, also 3-2-1 backup rule, and every 3y I’ll archive stuff to free up space.
Interesting knowledge usually gets shared by me via https://wiki.tilde.fun/. I often link it to friends and colleagues when they ask me to explain stuff. Sometimes I also copy articles I write for corporate knowledge bases after work into my wiki in a more sophisticated form. I tend to not cater to 5-year-olds in my personal wiki, but it’s inevitable in a corpo setting where you have people with no experience at all.
How do you do it?
What’s the wildest sentence you’ve had to write to cater to the aforementioned corporate five year olds? Like say, a painfully obvious thing that is apparently a very niche detail?
A follow-up question on this topic, how often do you guys go back and check out these memories? Because I seemed to have developed an habit of clicking videos and photos but never checking them and when I check them after a long while, I literally have 0 memory of that scene.
I think It’s one thing to have these memories stored somewhere digitally and one thing to have them registered in our heads. It’s an odd feeling when you look a old video and feel “did I really do that?” Does anybody else relate to this?
Mainly my shitty memory. I have photos of events like family meetings, birthdays, holidays on my phones SD card. I manually save things like contacts, not-so-important notes to my SD card. Copy my stuff to my PC every now and then (2 mo. usually). My important notes are on paper written with a several-thousand-year-old script.
I take pictures of the architecture around me.
The mundane stuff that no one bothers to document and won’t make it into historical architecture books.
I have over a hundred gigabytes of liminal space photos I’m debating whether I should share on Lemmy or not.
I think you’re cool. I’ve been wanting to do a similar project, but I don’t have a camera ready yet, and life is happening quite a bit these days. I’ve got a few liminal space photos in my phone’s camera reel that I think are neat at least. I’d like to see what you’ve got if you ever decide to share. Would be cool to see.
I used to write in physical journals for years (1998-2008ish) but kind of fell away from it after that. Couldn’t assign it to habit anymore. From 2004-2010 I kept a LiveJournal but drifted from that too, only log on once every few years to post an update.
Now I just use Daylio to record vague daily updates about my mood, health, activities, etc.
Maybe eventually I’ll pick up a journal again but that’d have to be when my daily life gets a little more predictable.
I try to identify the most unusual thing I encountered every day, then I take a two second video of the moment.
Weirdly, chat logs and friend conversations.
Whatever I’ve told them and whatever I said somewhere, it’s a pinpoint recollection of where things were at for me at the time.






