donderdag 29 januari 2009

Daily Routines

De site Daily Routines staat vol dagschema's. How writers, artists, and other interesting people organize their days. De groten der aarde staan ingedeeld op 'occupations' (filmmaker, muzikant, schrijver, staatsman) en 'habits' (zware drinkers, drugsgebruikers, night owls - geniaal).

Ik hou van dit soort wetenswaardigheden. We lezen dat Kant 's ochtends in bed pijp rookt ("the time he needed for smoking it was devoted to meditation"). Franz Kafka houdt bijna de hele middag siƫsta. De Japanse schrijver Haruki Murakami staat elke ochtend om vier uur op, om na zes uur werk minstens tien kilometer te gaan zwemmen of hardlopen. En Orhan Pamuk verplicht zichzelf elke dag tien uur te werken.

Het dagschema van Charles Darwin ziet er zo uit:

"7 a.m.
Rose and took a short walk.
7:45 a.m.
Breakfast alone
8–9:30 a.m.
Worked in his study; he considered this his best working time.
9:30–10:30 a.m.
Went to drawing-room and read his letters, followed by reading aloud of family letters.
10:30 a.m.–12 or 12:15 p.m.
Returned to study, which period he considered the end of his working day.
12 noon
Walk, starting with visit to greenhouse, then round the sandwalk, the number of times depending on his health, usually alone or with a dog.
12:45 p.m.
Lunch with whole family, which was his main meal of the day. After lunch read The Times and answered his letters.
3 p.m.
Rested in his bedroom on the sofa and smoked a cigarette, listened to a novel or other light literature read by ED [Emma Darwin, his wife].
4 p.m.
Walked, usually round sandwalk, sometimes farther afield and sometimes in company.
4:30–5:30 p.m.
Worked in study, clearing up matters of the day.
6 p.m.
Rested again in bedroom with ED reading aloud.
7.30 p.m.
Light high tea while the family dined. In late years never stayed in the dining room with the men, but retired to the drawing-room with the ladies. If no guests were present, he played two games of backgammon with ED, usually followed by reading to himself, then ED played the piano, followed by reading aloud.
10 p.m.
Left the drawing-room and usually in bed by 10:30, but slept badly.
Even when guests were present, half an hour of conversation at a time was all that he could stand, because it exhausted him."

Adapted from Charles Darwin: A Companion by R.B. Freeman, accessed on The Complete Work of Charles Darwin Online.

En de nieuwste aanwinst van de site:

"Although his presidency is barely a week old, some of Mr. Obama’s work habits are already becoming clear. He shows up at the Oval Office shortly before 9 in the morning, roughly two hours later than his early-to-bed, early-to-rise predecessor. Mr. Obama likes to have his workout — weights and cardio — first thing in the morning, at 6:45. (Mr. Bush slipped away to exercise midday.)

He reads several papers, eats breakfast with his family and helps pack his daughters, Malia, 10, and Sasha, 7, off to school before making the 30-second commute downstairs — a definite perk for a man trying to balance work and family life. He eats dinner with his family, then often returns to work; aides have seen him in the Oval Office as late as 10 p.m., reading briefing papers for the next day.
“Even as he is sober about these challenges, I have never seen him happier,” Mr. Axelrod said. “The chance to be under the same roof with his kids, essentially to live over the store, to be able to see them whenever he wants, to wake up with them, have breakfast and dinner with them — that has made him a very happy man."

New York Times, 28 januari 2009

3 opmerkingen:

Anoniem zei

Die Darwin had een mooi leven zeg...Ik sta o 5.45 op ..neem de trein van Amersfoort naar Leiden..7.30 achter de computer..schrijven vergaderen literatuur..5.00 terug 6.30 thuis eten met kinderen..opruimen 20.30 na het nieuws weer achter de computer..10.30 klaar....

en ik lees nog zelf......

Toon zei

Tja, Darwin heeft ook slechtere tijden gekend, bijv. toen hij constant zeeziek was tijdens zijn reizen op de Beagle.
Maar goed, het bleek ook voor hem een survival of the fittest.....

Gr. Toon

Anoniem zei

Truman Capote's antwoord op de vraag over z'n dagelijkse routine begint ook mooi:

INTERVIEWER
What are some of your writing habits? Do you use a desk? Do you write on a machine?

CAPOTE
I am a completely horizontal author. I can't think unless I'm lying down, either in bed or stretched on a couch and with a cigarette and coffee handy. I've got to be puffing and sipping. [..]

The Paris Review, Issue 16, 1957