The Year of the Diary
New year, new beginnings – and one of my favourite forms of fresh start is a brand new diary.
For most of my life, I have kept a diary, jotting down the most memorable events of the day. Then in 2010, I swapped to blogging about once a week as my preferred vehicle for musing about my life.
But at the beginning of 2024, feeling the years were rushing by faster than ever, I decided to resume hand-writing an account of each day as it happened. I reasoned that writing a daily “done” list would make me feel better about never completing my always over-ambitious to-do list.

I rarely read previous entries, but towards the end of the year, I noticed, glancing back, that nearly every day began “Another busy day…”
This discovery banished my fear that I wasn’t making the most of my allotted span. It also licensed me to grant myself more much-needed rest time.
Keeping a diary has always been good for mental health, whenever and whatever you choose to write in it.
Especially in an age when hand-writing is being increasingly replaced by typing on keyboards, there are physical rewards in writing in a special book by hand – the soothing rhythm of forming the words, the flow of the ink, the silky feel of the paper.
There’s a sense of accomplishment as you fill the book with a unique and personal record of your existence. It’s life-affirming.
As a diarist, you’re in excellent company. Real and fictitious diaries have a special place in our culture, from Samuel Pepys and Anne Frank to The Diary of a Nobody by George and Weedon Grossmith, The Diary of a Provincial Lady by E M Delafield, Adrian Mole and Bridget Jones.
Think you don’t have time to write a diary? Bear in mind that even Queen Victoria found space in her life for a daily diary habit. She kept a diary from 1832 to ten days before her death in 1901. She even wrote in Urdu for a while, to practise the lessons she was taking from her Indian servant Abdul Karim. Her example is making me rethink my daily Duolingo habit, although I’d need to expand my vocabulary to write a Latin diary – and master more than the present tense.
There are other ways to keep diaries, from illustrator Chris Riddell’s daily cartoon to my friend Linda Alvis’s photographic record of her travels, later translated into paintings and finally into written travelogue.
The “temperature blanket” is another record I’m planning to keep in 2025, knitting a nightly row in a colour determined by the day’s weather.
However you plan to keep track of your new year, I wish you a peaceful, healthy and fulfilling 2025.

This post was written for the January 2025 edition of the Hawkesbury Parish News.
IN OTHER NEWSLooking Back on 2024What did I achieve in 2024?
Writing

Read widely and voraciously. I won’t share the number of books I read – it’s not a numbers game – but here are some of my favourites this year:
The 11th Inkblot by J Hermann KleigerThe Cry of a Bird by Dorothy IglesiasThe Quiet American by Graham GreeneA Time to Keep Silence by Patrick Leigh FermorThe White Umbrella by Brian SewellThe Notebook: A History of Thinking on Paper by Roland AllenUnder the Bridge by Anne BishopThe Box of Death by R MarsdenFor the Love of Mark Twain by Kalyn GensicArden by G D HarperThe History of Medicine in 12 Objects by Dr Carol CooperLake of Widows by Liza PerratTo Love and Serve by Mary FloodOne Day in Provence by Lorna FergussonWild Mary: The Life of Mary Wesley by Patrick MarnhanTravel
Visited Copenhagen with my daughter (21), also taking advantage of the local train network to travel further within Denmark and also to SwedenMade several trips ot Aberystwyth, where my daughter is in her final undergraduate yearVisited various family members in London, Sussex and SuffolkPersonal
Continued to be very active in village life, singing in the Hawkesbury Choir and bell ringing with the Hawkesbury RingersWas confirmed by the Bishop of Tewkesbury in St Catherine’s Chapel, Westonbirt SchoolTook a course and was commissioned as a Lay Worship Leader at St John the Evangelist’s Church in CharfieldJoined the PCC (Parochial Church Council) for my parish church of St Mary the Virgin, HawkesburyWas appointed secretary of the Friends of St Mary’s, after being on the committee for several years

What are my plans for 2025?
Writing

Travel
I’m planning to combine further trips around the UK catching up with friends and family around the country, including London, Norfolk, Suffolk, Sussex, and ScotlandMy annual trip with my daughter is likely to be either to Scandinavia or Madeira – we’re still decidingThere may be at least one writing retreat coming up – I’m always open to suggestions!Personal

All in all, I’m hoping for a busy, productive and enjoyable 2025, with a healthy balance of writing, reading, travel, and time with family, friends and community.
What are you key achievements of 2024 and your goals for 2025? I’d love to hear about your plans too!