My first real writing job was in the Army. I started writing on yellow pads with blue felt-tip pens. But working for an Army newspaper meant I had to graduate from pen and paper to the typewriter. The first typewriter I used for writing was gray, to match the gray Army furniture in the office. That furniture blended well with the beige walls in the stone headquarters building of 4th Brigade, 4th Infantry Division, Wiesbaden Air Base, West Germany.
Now I am taking a Creative Writing course at Franklin and Marshall College. Part of the course is writing in class. I have white paper and a ballpoint pen and am back to writing with my left hand on paper. Weird. I have not written on paper, except to take notes, since the 80s. Writing is something you do on a computer--as I am doing right now.
But I like the feeling of writing on paper. We have to turn in our work in Microsoft Word, so it also means that anything I write on paper will have to be re-typed on a computer. I began my writing life with multiple drafts. Now I will be back to multiple drafts.
Of course, for this blog, I will continue to write what I am thinking as I think it, hit publish and move on.