very good! your daily regimen is up with those of great, who i had read about in ancient issues of ‘The Writer’, and ‘Writers’ Digest’. My typing progreessed from theclass in high school, through IBM teletype/card punch machines, past AHEM! AOL one hand forum typing, to mainly 2 fingers, or a stylus pen on my phone.
A while back, while employed by dah govmint, I found a bunch of federal hardbound ledgers and journals. Aside from the ledger, 8x14, the others fit on the shelf just right, and had more pages than most commerrcial journals.
The ledger reminded me of my bookkeeping and accounting classes in high school.
Itrust this finds your writing tool with many words to say!
(ps) ebay chinese parker ballpoint refills ...brooklyn raspberry!!
I keep a steady supply of the journals, by Mead. I am down to about three left, which means next time I see them I need to purchase more. I like to keep about 5 to 10 on hand, since I often give them t others in the hopes it will nudge them into journaling.
Most of my old journals will undoubtedly end up in the trash after my death, but I do have some I will be leaving with my church for posterity sake.
I have the ones with my thoughts, then the ones I have turned into my own commentaries on various books of the Scriptures, with one that I hope to conclude on the book of Psalms one day.
I may check out those pens, but not for journaling, mot=re for other things. For journaling I use only mechanical pencils. I find the cheeper they are the longer they last. All the good ones seem to malfunction within a few Months, the cheep ones last years.
I am in the hunt for a good very fine point black pens that does not bleed, for use on my Bibles for notes. Do those you offered fit that bill?
By the way, have you seen the new interleaved Bibles? They have a blank page between the pages for massive note taking. Below are a few pics of mine. As you can see, I try to take full advantage of the extra blank pages for awesome note. With these, one could write their own whole Bible commentary.