Journaling or journalling is now a part of my life that I return to when I feel overloaded or want to be inspired! In times of personal growth or struggle, it has been an essential tool for my well being as well as opening windows of inspiration. Enjoy this earlier post!



Whichever way to spell it…. I admit that I was very reluctant to start journaling myself – I thought it was for people with lots of time and a leaning towards poetry … and American teenage girls… not me at all! It turned out that I was being too quick to judge.

Photo by Ivan Samkov on Pexels.com

You can buy yourself a beautifully bound notebook to capture your personal experiences and insights in writing, set up a WordPress blog with this intention, or simply open a document on your computer to allow you to capture all the things going on in your head or to vent your frustrations.

Journaling is about taking what is in your head and heart and putting it in writing.

 The Benefits
  • Research shows that writing about stressful life experiences boosts our emotional health and also improves immune function both in healthy people and in those with chronic illness. (It feels good and does you good!)
  • It gives you the freedom to express anything and everything that occurs to you, in whatever way you want to do it.
  • It can start a new train of thought or give you a new perspective. It opens space for creativity and new ideas.
  • It allows you to unburden yourself without complaining to other people.
  • It’s private and only between you and you, other people’s reactions don’t need to be considered.
  • As well as documenting your actions, plans and progress through life, it can be an indispensable healing tool in times of transition and stress.
  • Its a way to bring you to your Middle Ground. A place to connect with your Self. A place for centering and refreshment.

No matter how you choose to do it, it can be powerful and beneficial!

My Own Experience

I decided that I would spend 5 minutes every day writing my thoughts and ideas down in a word document before I opened my e-mails.  The first day I spent 5 minutes expressing how uncomfortable and unsure I was about it.

The second day I captured all the new ideas that had come to me during the night that I didn’t want to lose. It felt good to know it was there and I could refer to it later.

The third day was 10 minutes of venting my frustration about a disappointment and then an other 10 minutes on an action plan to move forward. Now that felt great. It can be a self coaching tool – and it saves spouses, friends and colleagues from being the recipients of the vent.

I found it works really well for me when I am over thinking, overloaded and stressed, or when something is happening in my life where I have little control over.

My other experience of journaling has been while at my Kripalu Yoga Teacher Training programs. It was introduced as a mindfulness practice. Writing by pen and capturing what came up during a particular exercise or practice. I found writing by pen was a different experience and allowed me to capture my stream of consciousness in the moment.

Both methodologies work for me at different times.

I came to see that my reluctance to start came from judgment and a fear of “digging up stuff that is best left alone”. What I found instead was buried treasure.

If you are like I was – just try it with an open mind and open heart and see what gems are there to be discovered.

 Namaste

 

 

16 responses to “Journaling or Journalling”

  1. Can relate to every bit of it.
    I started journaling a year ago.
    It has changed many things for me,
    Firstly it’s a great reflection to write down what happened during a day. It brings accountability in work as you know every movement that you have to write down what you did in night.

    I read somewhere that the best way to start journaling is
    Write down answer to 2 questions every single day
    1. What good I did today
    2. What good I will do tomorrow.

    And start
    Over the period of time one becomes good at this.

    It is truly underrated activity.

    I do write affirmations in my journal every day too. This helps those affirmation to work more quickly as the writing something is more serious activity for subconscious mind than thinking.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. Thank you for sharing your approach Vaibhav. It’s a great practice in bringing out the best in us. 💐

      Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks 💯 Eliza ❣️

      Like

  2. It is a powerful way to express ourselves Val, in our own way, in our own time, in our own direction. And no negative feedback…unless we are that judgemental of ourselves. Great post kind lady, may it heal in whatever way you wish 🤗❤️🙏

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Thanks so much Mark💖

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Perfect timing for me as I contemplate possible big life changes Val. Thank you so much! ❤️🙏

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Thank you Paul. 💐 I’m so glad it resonated with you. 🙏

      Like

  4. Yes and yes! I did so for years, stopped, restarted. I am in the restart phase again. And trying to convince my daughter to do the same.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. I hear you Dale. The time has to be right … and sometimes when we just sit and start writing, we discover if it is! No pressure, just curiosity 🙏 Thank you for being here 💖

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Journaling and writing are great ways to sort out our feelings and thoughts. Kudos Val.

    Liked by 2 people

  6. Great practice! Journaling on a daily basis allows us to access hidden recesses and expand the boundaries of our minds. It promotes clarity and fosters insight as we allow our imagination to take flight. It helps us to assign positive meaning to what life metes out.

    Liked by 2 people

  7. I love the metaphor of the buried treasure! I can so relate. I started journaling (I use one “l”) 45 years ago when my dad died. I was so grief stricken that writing about it was the only way I could work through the loss. I did not journal every day, but I always had a spiral notebook around to write when inspired. Now I try to do the ‘morning pages’ of 750 words each morning. I am fairly consistent. I use a program called 750days.com – I’ve used it for 11 years now. I still journal in a notebook when I write with others, like in a writers group or at a coffee shop (or on Zoom) with a friend. I never run out of things to write about. I might read Daily Dharma on Tricycle magazine, an article on Marginalian or some other inspiring piece. That becomes fodder for poems and stories and just observations. Journaling has taught me to notice details, work through challenges, clarify my thoughts, even draft letters. It grounds my day.

    Thank you for posting on this topic. I seldom think about how important journaling is to me. But it is so much.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Thank you so much for sharing LouAnne 💖 It is a wonderful practice that we can do in our own way. I love how it has evolved for you and is such a key part in your creative life 🥰

      Like

I’d love to hear from you …