Doodling is relaxing for several reasons, and this page is actually a beautiful example of many of them.
Looking at the image, I see repeated geometric diamonds in the upper section and rhythmic flower-like loops in the lower section. These patterns have three qualities that the brain tends to enjoy:
1. Repetition calms the mind
When you draw the same shape again and again, the brain doesn't need to make many difficult decisions. The analytical part can rest while the motor system settles into a steady rhythm.
It is similar to:
Knitting
Japa with a mala
Walking at a constant pace
Repeated Vedic chanting
The body finds a rhythm and the mind becomes quieter.
2. It creates a state close to meditation
Your attention is gently focused on:
the next line,
the next curve,
the spacing,
the emerging pattern.
You are not forcing concentration. Instead, concentration arises naturally. Psychologists sometimes call this a "flow state."
Many traditional Indian arts work this way:
Kolam
Rangoli
Mandala drawing
Yantra construction
Temple ornamentation
The act of making the pattern becomes more important than the finished pattern.
3. The brain loves order
Humans are naturally attracted to symmetry and pattern.
When a diamond fits neatly into another diamond, or when petals repeat uniformly, the brain experiences a small sense of completion. It is as if scattered thoughts are being gently arranged into order.
4. It occupies restless mental energy
Many thoughts are neither useful nor deep; they simply circulate.
Doodling gives that mental energy somewhere harmless to go.
That is why people often doodle:
while listening,
while talking on the phone,
during contemplation.
The hands are busy, which can help the mind become less noisy.
5. It engages both logic and creativity
Your upper pattern is quite structured and mathematical. Your lower pattern is more organic and floral.
So both sides of the mind participate:
the side that enjoys order,
the side that enjoys beauty.
That combination is particularly satisfying.
A spiritual perspective
Many traditions have noticed that repetitive sacred activity quiets the mind.
A devotee may:
repeat a divine name,
string flowers,
draw a kolam,
write a mantra,
copy verses.
The outward activity appears sim
ple, but inwardly it gathers the mind into one place.
In that sense, doodling can become a very gentle form of meditation. Not because the shapes themselves are magical, but because they encourage attention without strain.
Seeing the patience in these pages, I wonder whether the relaxation comes not only from doodling itself but also from watching a pattern slowly emerge from an empty sheet. There is something deeply satisfying about seeing order appear line by line—a small reflection of how the mind itself becomes more settled when given a simple, repetitive task.
This second page reveals something even more interesting.
The first page looked like practicing a few repeating motifs. Here, you've created bands of patterns, almost like decorative borders one might see in:
temple carvings,
textile designs,
manuscript margins,
kolam variations,
architectural friezes.
What strikes me is the progression. Your mind seems to be exploring a visual alphabet:
flowers,
stars,
loops,
triangles,
spirals,
diamonds,
interlocking lines,
geometric lattices.
Many artists and designers do exactly this when they are not trying to "draw something." They are exploring the possibilities hidden within a few simple strokes.
There is also a cognitive reason such pages are satisfying. The brain is constantly trying to answer two competing desires:
Novelty — "Show me something new."
Predictability — "Show me something orderly."
Your doodles provide both simultaneously.
Each row follows a rule, so there is order.
But every new row introduces a different rule, so there is novelty.
The result is a pleasant balance between boredom and overload.
I also notice that some rows become darker and denser. That often happens when the hand takes over from conscious thought. The doodling becomes less about the pattern and more about the motion itself. At that point the pen is almost "thinking aloud."
This may be why many people discover ideas while doodling. The conscious mind is occupied just enough that deeper thoughts can surface.
In Indian traditions there is an interesting parallel. A devotee may repeatedly draw:
kolams,
yantras,
lotus petals,
temple motifs,
mantra letters.
The repetition is not merely decoration. It trains steadiness. Over time, the hand, eye, and attention begin moving together.
Looking at these pages, I would not call them random doodles. They resemble a personal catalogue of patterns. If you filled enough notebooks this way, you would eventually have your own library of motifs from which textile designers, rangoli artists, and geometric artists often draw inspiration.
And perhaps that points to another reason doodling is relaxing: unlike most activities, there is no demand to succeed. A line can become a flower, a flower can become a border, a border can become a lattice. Nothing is wasted. The page simply accepts whatever the hand discovers.
What you describe is actually a recognized creative experience.
You say, "I don't decide; the pen guides the design." That feeling is common among artists, musicians, poets, and even mathematicians when they enter a deep state of engagement. The conscious mind is no longer issuing detailed instructions. Instead, years of accumulated visual memory, motor habits, and intuition begin expressing themselves directly through the hand.
The satisfaction may come from several things happening at once:
The hand is moving continuously.
The eye is receiving immediate feedback.
The brain is discovering rather than planning.
There is no pressure to reach a predefined result.
In a sense, you become both the creator and the observer.
What is especially interesting is your remark that a single pattern is less satisfying than many viewed together.
That suggests the real artwork may not be an individual pattern at all. It may be the collection.
One page shows a motif. Ten show a vocabulary. A hundred such patterns show a visual language.
When you flip through several books, your mind perceives connections that are invisible on a single page. Patterns evolve, merge, split, reappear years later in different forms. The whole collection becomes something larger than its parts.
This reminds me of how devotees sometimes describe writing the Divine Name thousands of times. One page is ordinary. A notebook full of names creates a different impression. Not because each word changes, but because repetition itself acquires a presence.
Your notebooks may be functioning similarly. They are not merely storing patterns; they are recording a long conversation between hand, eye, and attention.
There is also a mathematical aspect. The human brain is exceptionally good at detecting recurring structures. When you view many pages together, your brain unconsciously notices:
symmetries,
variations,
recurring motifs,
transformations,
rhythms.
The result is a sense of richness and completeness that a single page cannot provide.
In fact, from what you've shown, I suspect that if someone carefully catalogued all your notebooks, they would find a surprisingly small number of basic strokes generating hundreds or thousands of distinct patterns. Nature works the same way: a few simple rules create leaves, flowers, shells, rivers, and galaxies.
Perhaps that is why these books are satisfying. They reveal, page after page, how much variety can emerge from a few lines and curves. The pen appears to be leading, but it is also revealing the hidden patterns your mind has been collecting for years.
Now I can better appreciate what you meant by "plenty of books."
This is no longer just doodling in the casual sense. What I see is a systematic exploration of pattern generation. Nearly every row begins with a very simple rule:
a loop,
a petal,
a triangle,
a spiral,
a star,
a leaf,
a crossing line.
Then the rule is repeated, stretched, compressed, mirrored, linked, or rotated.
What fascinates me is that many rows appear to be variations on the same underlying gesture. A flower becomes a star. A star becomes a lattice. A lattice becomes a border. A border becomes a woven pattern.
That is exactly how many traditional art forms evolve over centuries.
Looking at these pages, I am reminded of three things:
Kolam
A kolam artist often starts with a few dots and lets the line find its own path. The final design feels discovered rather than invented.
Vedic Chanting
A mantra may use only a few syllables, yet endless melodies and recitation styles emerge from them.
Nature
A few biological rules generate millions of leaf shapes, flowers, shells, and branching forms.
Your notebooks seem to follow the same principle: simple rules, endless variation.
You mentioned that the pen guides the design. Looking at these pages, I believe that is literally true in a practical sense. After drawing thousands upon thousands of patterns, your hand has built up a vast memory of movements. The hand recognizes possibilities before the conscious mind names them.
A curve suggests another curve. A petal suggests another petal. A crossing line suggests a new symmetry.
The next pattern emerges almost automatically.
What I find most striking is that there are very few corrections or abandoned attempts. The patterns keep flowing. That suggests you are not evaluating each line critically as you draw it. You are allowing the process to unfold. That freedom is probably a large part of the pleasure.
In fact, if someone showed me these notebooks without explanation, I might think they were the sketchbooks of a textile designer, a kolam enthusiast, or someone studying ornamental geometry.
There is also something beautifully aligned with your spiritual interests. You have often spoken about rereading your blog posts and discovering new connections. These notebooks seem to do the same thing visually. A pattern drawn years ago may reappear later in a transformed form, just as a spiritual insight revisits the mind in a deeper form after time has passed.
So perhaps the satisfaction is not only in drawing the patterns.
It is in witnessing a long, ongoing dialogue between the hand and the imagination—a dialogue that has continued across many books and many years, with no need for a final destination. That is quite rare in a world where most activities are done to reach an end. Here, the journey itself seems to be the reward.









