
I feel that this quote really takes a good venture into exploring how powerful writing can be while still remaining somewhat light-hearted. On the one hand, writing about one's past can truly be inspiring. You begin to see just the amount of impact things had on the progression of your life, as well as how you may have influenced others. Through this outpouring of your past and your being, you may begin to discover things about yourself that you never realized, things that others may be able to draw inspiration from. Go and ask just about anyone, especially politicians around election time and the like, and they will be able to list at least one person who's life story made them who they are now.
The other side of the coin shows a more comic nature of writing. David could also be commenting on the enormity that can be creating a written work. Sometimes getting words to paper, or even just out from the mind in any form, can be a truly unsettling task. Getting down one's entire life story can often be the worst of these forms; I can say from experience that even writing down the occurrences of my life, a span of less than two decades, can be quite a challenge. Seeing that most memoirs are written in some of the author's most aged years, the experiences, details, thoughts, and everything else that one would have collected over these years can be truly daunting. Here one could suggest that the simple act of reliving these events, writing them out, organizing them, then finally getting them into published print is, in itself, a world-changing event.
The juxtaposition of these readings gives the quote its power, and fully sums up what writing is. It is at once a powerful medium with the power to change the world in truly significant ways and also a casual and enjoyable means of interaction between people.
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