There have been times when I wrote something and thought it didn't mean much at the time.
Today, I felt strangely tired. I became slightly interested in that place. I repeatedly remembered the same words. At that point, it was just a note. It wasn't any kind of conclusion. It wasn't a major discovery either. But later, when you reread it, another light shines on it.
Time brings meaning.
The interesting thing about records is that meaning isn't completed at the moment. What was not understood immediately after writing becomes slightly different with time. It connects to other articles. It resembles dreams from a different period. Feelings experienced while traveling and discomforts in everyday life overlap. That kind of thing happens. Perhaps, meaning doesn't exist entirely on paper from the beginning, but gradually emerges over time.
Therefore, don't rush.
When you write something, you often want to immediately decide its meaning. "This is a good sign." "This is a warning." "This is an important message." You might feel like saying that. But there's no need to hurry. Leave things that are not understood at the moment as they are. Important things will remain even after time has passed. In fact, things that still remain after being left for a while can be slightly more reliable.
For what you can see later.
Recording isn't just about providing answers right now. It's also for your future self to look at it later. That future self will have slightly more materials than the current self. They are reading different articles. They are going to different places. They are having different experiences. Therefore, even a line that you don't understand now might become a clue in the future. Meanings that were not understood when written may become clear later. Leaving such space is an important part of Wayanata's records.