I feel that in life, there are too many trivial details, trivial chores, and fleeting thoughts, and it is impossible to stuff them all into my head, but I am worried about writing them down on a casually torn note paper. Is it easy to be forgotten in an unknown corner? The Analog Memory Desk, a roller-type note desk designed by designer Kristen Camara, may be able to help you!
The biggest difference between the Analog Memory Desk and an ordinary desk is that there is 1,100 yards (about 1,005 meters) of white paper extending from the desktop to the scroll under the desk. You can write, memorize, and scroll at any time, from phone numbers to , addresses, and today’s to-do items can all be written on it. When it is full, you only need to bend down to move the scroll and adjust the position of the paper to continue recording. If necessary, you can "roll" it out again.
Of course, it is very likely that these fragments and fragmented information will never be taken out after we turn around. But from another perspective, perhaps these bundles of "essays" are like a different kind of diary, recording us in a certain moment, many years (well...actually it doesn't take too many years) Taking it out and reading it will make us feel surprised, unfamiliar or knowingly smile at ourselves at that moment, but it also gives us the opportunity to re-examine and understand ourselves.