The Great Book of Journaling: How Journal Writing Can Support a Life of Wellness, Creativity, Meaning and Purpose
By Eric Maisel and Lynda Monk
2/5
()
Journaling
Personal Growth
Creativity
Self-Discovery
Writing
Power of Writing
Coming of Age
Overcoming Adversity
Mentor
Hero's Journey
Mentorship
Love at First Sight
Personal Transformation
Family Legacy
Inner Struggle
Self-Reflection
Mindfulness
Self-Expression
Self-Awareness
Healing
About this ebook
From psychotherapist Eric Maisel and Lynda Monk, Director of the International Association for Journal Writing, a guide to journal writing for higher self-esteem. This is the next-generation book on journaling techniques that introduces a younger generation to the immense benefits of journaling and provides all journal writers with the tools they need to grow, heal, and deepen their personal writing experience.
Therapeutic journal writing can promote individual healing, creativity, and community-building. The Great Book of Journaling offers multiple perspectives on journaling techniques in an easy-to-use, practical format, along with providing a comprehensive introduction to various techniques and methods for deepening your personal writing.
Learn from the best.We’ve rounded up forty of the top journal experts in the world to explain exactly what journal writing can do for you! The Great Book of Journaling is full of practical tips, evidence-based research, and rich anecdotes from their coaching, teaching, therapy work with journal writers, or their personal journal writing.
The Great Book of Journaling can help:
- Create high self-esteem, self-love, and self-confidence
- Improve your health and your sense of wellbeing
- Calm your worry and anxiety
- Serve your creative needs
- Deepen your personal writing
Readers of books on journal writing such as Mindfulness Journal, The Self-Discovery Journal, or No Worries will love The Great Book of Journaling.
Eric Maisel
Eric Maisel, PhD, is the author of more than forty works of nonfiction and fiction and is widely regarded as America’s foremost creativity coach. He trains creativity coaches nationally and internationally and provides core trainings for the Creativity Coaching Association. Eric is a print columnist for Professional Artist magazine and a blogger for Fine Art America and Psychology Today. In 2012 he developed natural psychology, the new psychology of meaning. His books include Coaching the Artist Within, Rethinking Depression, Fearless Creating, The Van Gogh Blues, and many others. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with his family. His websites are www.ericmaisel.com and www.naturalpsychology.net.
Read more from Eric Maisel
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Reviews for The Great Book of Journaling
2 ratings1 review
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Waste of time.. Better books out there on journaling I'm sure
Book preview
The Great Book of Journaling - Eric Maisel
Copyright © 2022 by Eric Maisel and Lynda Monk.
Published by Conari Press, a division of Mango Publishing Group, Inc.
Cover Design: Ron Wheatley
Layout & Design: Carmen Fortunato
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The Great Book of Journaling: How Journal Writing Can Support a Life of Wellness, Creativity, Meaning and Purpose
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication number: 2022933691
ISBN: (print) 978-1-64250-854-3, (ebook) 978-1-64250-855-0
BISAC category code SEL024000, SELF-HELP / Self-Management / Stress Management
Printed in the United States of America
For journal writers everywhere,
your story matters.
For Ann and Peter,
our supportive spouses.
Table of Contents
Eric’s Introduction
Lynda’s Introduction
1. Juicy Journaling by SARK
2. Journaling Basics by Mari L. McCarthy
3. Journaling Simplicity by Kathleen Adams
4. Journaling Resistance by Liz Crocker
5. The Reflective Journal by Lynda Monk
6. The Creative Journal by Lucia Capacchione
7. The Storytelling Journal by Judy Reeves
8. The Healing Journal by Jacob Nordby
9. The Legacy Journal by Merle R. Saferstein
10. The Elemental Journal by Midori Evans
11. The Digital Journal by Hannah Braime
12. The Planning Journal by Jennifer Britton
13. The Altered Journal by Chris Leischner
14. The Becoming Unstuck Journal by A M Carley
15. The Forest Journal by Mary Ann Burrows
16. The Audio Journal by Dwight McNair
17. The Conflict Resolution Journal by Linda Dobson
18. The Compassionate Journal by Ahava Shira
19. Contemplative Journaling by Kimberly Wulfert
20. Journaling as an Instrument of Mindfulness by Beth Jacobs
21. Journaling Your Transitions by Leia Francisco
22. The Writing Body by Emelie Hill Dittmer
23. Inner Critic Journaling by Emma-Louise Elsey
24. From Journal to Memoir by Eric Maisel
25. Keeping the Fragmentary Journal by Sheila Bender
26. Journaling in the Third Person by Lara Zielin
27. Journaling in Community by Mary Ann Moore
28. Journaling in a Group: A Facilitator’s Perspective by Nancy Johnston
29. Journaling with Children by Nicolle Nattrass
30. Journals as Intergenerational Storytelling by Shehna Javeed
31. Journaling and Creative Writing by Diane Hopkins
32. Journaling and Design Inspiration by Meryl Cook
33. Journaling to Connect with Nature’s Wisdom by Jackee Holder
34. Journaling and Traveling by April Bosshard
35. Journaling to Find Love by Kim Ades
36. Journaling and the Lost Words by Marisé Barreiro
37. Journaling for Personal Growth by Sandra Marinella
38. Journaling for Dream Fulfillment by Joyce Chapman
39. Journaling and the Pursuit of Happiness by Susan Borkin
40. Journaling for Your Future Self by Elena Greco
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
About the Authors
Eric’s Introduction
By Eric Maisel
In a recent book of mine, Redesign Your Mind, I described how you can upgrade and redesign the source of your thoughts: your mind. In a second book, The Power of Daily Practice, I explained how daily practices help us live our life purposes and aid us in making daily meaning. In a third book, Lighting the Way, I introduced a contemporary philosophy of life based on self-awareness and personal responsibility. These three recent books have led me to this book, The Great Book of Journaling.
I wanted to co-edit this volume and introduce journaling to a wider audience because journaling can be your daily self-awareness practice. It can effectively support your intention to identify and live your life purposes, improve your indwelling style (the way you inhabit the room that is your mind), and help you solve personal and professional problems. It can be the go-to way you use your mind, maintain daily awareness, and take responsibility for your life. That’s a lot!
Journaling is just
a certain sort of conversation that you have with yourself. But what a just
! Having that conversation is you taking the time to consciously stop amidst your hectic day and asking yourself:
• What’s on my mind?
• What’s going on?
• "What should I be aware of?
It is a conscious, intentional stopping, signaling that you intend to live wisely rather than blindly or impulsively. That you have done that stopping signals that you are on your own side and that you care about your own life. It is not about doing a little writing.
It is about your abiding and honorable commitment to yourself.
That’s my view as to what journaling can mean and do. But, of course, there are many other views! This book presents a great variety of views, some of which do not necessarily speak to me personally. They may, however, speak to you! It is a tenet of my philosophy that I do not get to arbitrate the meaning in your life. You get to decide what’s important and what’s meaningful. For instance, it may move you deeply to connect up nature and journaling. Personally, I’d rather write in a bus station or a train station. But that’s just me!
We have been through trying times individually, as a society, and as a world. Those trying times are continuing and will continue. We have ongoing epidemics of sadness, anxiety, loneliness, and isolation. The world has its enormous problems. Each individual is taxed to the limit and struggling to make sense of things. There is no answer
to all of this—but there are responses that we can make.
We can take responsibility for our own thoughts and actions. We can put the world on our shoulders in our own small ways and lobby for justice, fairness, and goodness. We can love, give comfort, and occasionally smile. And we can endeavor to maintain courageous self-awareness by adopting practices that support that awareness. Journaling is one of those practices. It is not the only practice that you might adopt, but it is a great one.
I hope that the authors collected in this volume inspire you to find your own personal journaling practice. I think they will! Please enjoy—and, if you’re moved to do so, please be in touch. You can always reach me at [email protected]. Good luck!
Lynda’s Introduction
By Lynda Monk
Eric Maisel and I know first-hand the incredible value of journaling. Together, with the contributors in this book, we wanted to create a collection that would shine a bright light on the bounty of goodness that journaling can bring into peoples’ lives. The result is the book you are holding now, The Great Book of Journaling: How Journal Writing Can Support a Life of Wellness, Creativity, Meaning and Purpose.
In my role as a leader in the journal writing realm, I receive hundreds of questions about journaling and have discovered some of the key questions people have. This book is largely motivated by the desire to offer some answers to the types of questions below and share the wisdom of our inspiring contributors:
• What should I wr ite about?
• How often should I journal?
• How can I write consistently and create the journal ing habit?
• How can I go deeper with j ournaling?
• How can I get the most out of j ournaling?
• How can I keep my journaling fresh and in teresting?
• How can I use journaling for specific purposes , such as:
• Improving my health
• Decreasing my stress
• Dealing with anxiety and depression
• Solving m y problems
• Gaining clarity for life decisions
• Becoming mor e creative
• Feeli ng happier
• Making care er choices
• Overcoming grie f and loss
• Manifesting dreams and goals
• Increasing my self -awareness
In this book, we have brought together forty renowned journal writing enthusiasts and experts to share with you an abundance of journaling techniques. In the pages that follow, these journal writers offer an engaging array of journal writing prompts and activities to enliven and enrich your own personal journaling practice.
As for me, I have been a journal writer since I was a child. I love journal writing! My friends gift me beautiful journals. My teenage son recently spent $65 to buy me a designer journal and his thoughtful gift really touched my heart. I have never spent that much money on a journal in my entire life! My husband buys me colorful pens while teasing me that I have too many pens (and he might be right). I can spend hours in bookstores and stationary stores. Does this sound familiar?
I had no way of knowing that this personal hobby of simply writing down my thoughts and feelings and lists and doodles and poems and hopes and more could have, all these years later, become so central to who I have become and to the work I do in the world. Serendipity merged with passion and unleashed a dream somewhere in my heart to see manifest an organization that devoted itself to teaching about the healing and transformational power of writing.
In fact, it was my personal journaling, in great measure, that led to me discovering my desire to teach. This epiphany led me to start a business called Creative Wellness, where I spent years developing and teaching writing for self-care, resilience, and wellness programs focused on burnout prevention for helping and healthcare professionals.
I might not have done this without the idea for Creative Wellness emerging many times in the pages of my journal. From this awareness came action, and I embarked on an entrepreneurial path aligned with my passions for self-care and wellness through writing. This work led me to learn of an organization called the International Association for Journal Writing (IAJW.org), founded by Ruth Folit. I became a member of the IAJW and then offered an online course. I’ve always deeply valued the mission of this organization.
Ruth invited me to carry on the work of the IAJW as her successor and in 2018, I became the Director of the International Association for Journal Writing. I am honored to grow and lead a global community of journal writers, as well as offer a suite of online journaling courses, tools, e-books, and virtual events including writing circles, retreats, and workshops. There is not a week that goes by that I am not writing, speaking, or teaching about the many benefits of, and creative approaches to, journal writing.
I believe that journal writing is fundamentally a journey to self. It is a journey that influences the whole of our lives. You will see many versions of this same type of journey with journaling in the pages of this book—where journaling leads people to life changes, leaps of faith, new insights, and meaningful decisions. Journal writing can help you gain clarity and discover your life purposes and passions. It can also support you to cultivate the courage and self-trust you need to take action on all of your dreams and desires that emerge on the page.
My greatest hope for you as you read this book is that you are inspired to write for yourself and to take your personal writing to the next level, whatever that might mean to you. Perhaps you want to start journaling, keep journaling, or return to it, if you have forsaken it along the way.
Now, open The Great Book of Journaling. There is so much inspiration here. Embrace where your writing takes you! And while you are writing, know that there are journal writers all around the world also moving pen over paper.
Chapter 1
Juicy Journaling
By SARK
I hope you will go out and let stories, that is life, happen to you, and that you will work with these stories from your life—not someone else’s life—water them with your blood and tears and your laughter till they bloom, till you yourself burst into bloom. That is the work. The only work.
—Clarissa Pinkola Estes
Welcome to your curious, friendly, inspired writer self! Welcome also to your resistant, crabby, or avoiding parts that might feel afraid to write anything.
Juicy Journaling contains all the parts of you—not just the easiest or most attractive parts.
I’ve been practicing what I call Juicy Journaling for forty-two years, and it’s a place for me to:
• Feel myself as I am at any moment
• Be and become more of who I a ctually am
• Practice compassionately witnessing my experiences an d feelings
• Heal from horrifying and more ordina ry traumas
• Play with new insights and awareness
• Invent over what doesn’t feel juicy
• Explore new kinds of consc iousnesses
• Record my dreams
• Share my life as I’m living it
• Reflect on what has happened or rehearse the future
• Proces s memories
• Surpr ise myself
• Understand how I operate in the world
• Investigate my r esistances
• Make declarations and intentions
• Confess things I don’t understand
• Name things I might not be able to sa y out loud
• Create and write the new while living it
• Celebrate and name miraculous moments and e xperiences
• Detail everything I’m glad about
Juicy Journaling has led me to:
• Publish eighteen bestselling books and travel the world, meeting my readers and writing al ong my way
• Create a successful lifestyle brand an d business
• Speak and teach about the infinite power of creativity in action
• Live my purpose as a transformer, uplifter, and laser beam of love, and offer that through my art, words, and spirit
• Publish a soulful weekly Magic Blog
• Magically Mentor other writers and creators to begin, continue, or complete books and other creativ e projects
• Create and teach innovative writin g programs
Here are some of my recommendations for writing:
• Write now and ke ep writing
• If your writing bores you, let it lead you some where else
• Let yourself be originally you with yo ur writing
• Invest in juicy pens and thi rsty paper
• Release old stories you habitually tell and writ e new ones
• Forgive yourself for every word you haven ’t written
• Dare to quit your writing and start over
• Free your thinking and let new words form
• Honor your tender, scared parts while you write
• Allow your genius to be seen and known
One of my very favorite recommendations is to write your life as you live it. Write your stories. The ones that only you can tell.
A powerful way to write more is to use my MicroMOVEment Miracle Method. This is what I created almost thirty years ago to write what I dreamed of while still sometimes procrastinating, avoiding, and resisting writing.
This works because starting smaller will cause you to start more often instead of just thinking about what you want to start writing!
I also use my MicroMOVEment Miracle Method to do everything in my life because it beautifully supports my writing between going to the dentist, doing taxes, napping, avoiding, fooling around, and all the rest of what we do as humans.
Quick Things to Know about MicroMOVEments
MicroMOVEments are like an ignition system. They are a way to get started with your writing. They are five minutes in length or even less. I designed this method to work in five-minute increments because I figured I could do just about anything for five minutes. Most people are high achievers or overachievers and will immediately question how enough
writing can get done in five minutes. It works better than not starting at all or trying to do too much and getting crabby and tired.
My thirty years of research show that we’ll keep going 60 percent of the time if we can just get started. For the 40 percent of the time that you don’t keep going, using MicroMOVEments convinces the brain that something is happening with your writing, and this part of the brain doesn’t care if it’s five minutes or five hours of work—it stops you from constantly knowing that you’re not doing anything with your writing. This is powerFULL and will create great internal shifts that will change your writing habits forever.
MicroMOVEments help you to stop using your mind as a filing cabinet and gives your writing plans a physical home and plan.
MicroMOVEments cause a habit of completion,
which circumvents a habit of procrastination.
The MicroMOVEment Miracle Method is customizable to your style, and results will expand the more you make this method yours.
Creating Your Center and Choosing MicroMOVEments
The main way to create what you want with your writing is to create the center description.
This means that you’ll be writing down what you desire for your writing in a way that pleases or delights you. What you write in the center wants to be delightful.
I’ve become aware that we do and create the most when we’re delighted, inspired, moved, amused, and feeling good with our writing and writing processes.
Examples of MicroMOVEment Centers
You write what you desire in the center. You can write in the center of a piece of paper.
Here are two examples:
• Create and complete my super inspi ring novel
• Easily and joyfully publi sh my book
The way we describe our desires becomes what happens to them!
Create MicroMOVEMents to Bring Your Center to Life
I recommend adding delight or amusement to your MicroMOVEments because when you add delight, you’ll use them even more! Write a tiny movement on the paper you wrote your center on or use a Post-It.
Examples of delightFULL MicroMOVEments
• Play an amazing title game for my novel.
• Take out a shoebox of index cards with writing ideas and fling them into the air. Wherever the cards land, start writing from t hat point.
The main point is to create easy movement; any movement will lead to more movement. You can think of the MicroMOVEment Miracle Method as yoga for your mind. Tiny movements will lead to huge results.
Develop a micro mindset
where you realize that continuing is the whole point and that your writing process is equal in value to the results you seek. Think tinier, smaller, much smaller, then tinier and tinier still. This will result in words getting written.
It’s so much more fun to have an easy way to make more writing miracles and creative magic in our lives. A micro mindset does that most of all! Make it smaller, and you’ll start more often and become a happy finisher of writing rather than someone who rarely starts.
Also, pay less attention to creating the MicroMOVEments than you do to actually moving. If you find one or more MicroMOVEments that work, keep using them. I’ve used one for years that keeps working:
Find my lucky purple pen and put it next to the chaise lounge.
This led to at least a dozen books being written and published.
I micromove daily with my writing, and I exuberantly recommend it.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Here’s some of what I don’t recommend about writing:
• Resisting writing—it’s harder than actual ly writing
• Performing in yo ur journal
• Writing what you think people will wa nt to read
• Feeling like all your writing needs to be good
• Holding back from writing excruciatingly embarrass ing things
• Not exploring all your challengin g emotions
• Complaining about how much you’re n ot writing
• Judging what you write and finding it lacking before doing the work of crafting it to say wha t you want
• Quitting or not continuing before you’ve written what only you can write
Here are some ways to play and practice Juicy Journaling with prompts:
• What I didn’t say out l oud today…
• Something unexpectedly beau tiful was…
• How I fell in love with a new part of mys elf today…
• The crabbiest part of today was…
• The miracle of today…
• Today’s wild est dream…
• The quietest part inside me today…
• Right now, write whatever is in y our heart.
• Start: Right now, I’m wondering about ____________________
and see where that leads you.
Go deeper, say more, and write about all the other thoughts and feelings—the ones that surprise you, scare you, delight you, or embarrass you. Allow yourself to write words that are quintessentially real. Describe the places inside you that jump for joy or collapse in fear.
How can you care exquisitely for yourself with all your emotions? What brings out your best, most magic self?
Instead of saying on a lighter note,
say on a darker note,
and see what comes. What does it mean to live your life in full color? What color(s) most represents your life right now, and why? What color(s) would you like to represent your life right now, and why?
What is the juiciest thing imaginable that you would dare to write about? Go ahead… write it, write now! Let your writing be juicy!
Create a fast list of your favorite gorgeous moments, such as the smell of clothes dried in the sun. List two to twenty-five gorgeous moments as quickly as you think of them. Add details like perfectly steamed broccoli glowing in the pan.
I think that fast lists are a great way to get writing moving. When your writing is moving, it can make miracles.
Give yourself permission to allow the fun of flow in your writing. Your writing will respond beautifully to you letting it flow.
Flowing is nonlinear; it’s full of grace and wonder. Fresh glistening peaches and slants of sunlight are commonly seen during times of flow. Flowing can occur in the bathtub and the shower. Notice that water flows, as your writing will when you allow it. The state of flow loves surprises and new environments.
Take yourself and your writing somewhere brand new and fun! Let your stories tumble out. You have treasure chests of stories inside that are of great value. Let them out