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10 Steps to Keeping an On-going Journal
by Ruth Folit
Where do comedians, novelists, and playwrights get the raw material for their writings? From life, of course! Writers know that the anecdotes of the day, conversations overheard, and experiences, feelings, and subtleties of a moment may be the seeds of a short story, or the building blocks of a novel, or the spark for a magazine article. Keeping a journal keeps all these important morsels handy and ready to use when the appropriate time appears.
How do you get started and keep your journal writing going? There are no hard-set rules. How often you write, how much time you spend, and how rigorously you maintain a regular journaling schedule are matters of personal choice and circumstance. While an individual living alone may have hours of solitude and enormous flexibility in terms of time, a parent with small children may have very little of either. So it is of primary importance to find what works for you. The following general guidelines, however, may help you to establish journal writing as a regular and enduring habit.
1. Allow yourself
regular writing times.
Find a time of day that works well for you and use this time daily.
As much as possible, control interruptions during this time.
2. Provide
yourself a peaceful place to work.
If you need an uncluttered space, try to clear your work area before
sitting down to write.
3. Develop a
centering ritual.
Associating journaling with another pleasurable habit can help
strengthen the routine and create an atmosphere of self-nurturing.
When you are ready to write in your journal, consider pouring
yourself a cup of tea or coffee. Play relaxing music. Take a moment
for meditation, deep breathing, or simply relax and sit quietly for
a few minutes. Read a quotation or a passage of poetry. Listen to a
guided meditation tape.
4. Prompt
yourself with a routine self-reflection question.
If you tend to have trouble starting, prompt yourself with a routine
question, such as "What am I feeling right now?" or "What's on my
mind?" Anais Nin suggests asking, "What feels vivid, warm, or near
to you at the moment?" Another approach is to complete these
thoughts: "I feel ... ," "I need ..., " "I want ... ."
5. Write because
you want to write, not because you have to.
Don't allow journaling to become an obligation or chore. Remember
not to demand more of yourself than you can give. If you have missed
a day, or several days, accept that journaling, like life, is
imperfect, and go on. Write the next time you have a chance.
6. Create a
positive feedback loop.
As you continue to use the journal as an opportunity to be with and
learn about yourself, you will find that the practice gains a
momentum of its own. Discovering your own hidden depths piques your
curiosity and stimulates you to continue, setting up a positive
feedback loop between your conscious and unconscious mind.
7. Emphasize
process rather than product.
An important purpose of journal writing is simply expressing and
recording your thoughts and feelings. Concentrate on the process of
writing—keeping the flow of words going rather than worrying about
the end result. If your goal is to have a specific audience read
your piece, go back to it later and edit it. Use your journal as the
raw material for more polished writing.
8. Use
well-crafted journal writing tools.
People who stick with journal writing find pleasure in the process.
Some look for beautiful journal books or comfortable pens. Others
use their computers because of their speed and efficiency. Still
others use journal writing software to heighten the journal writing
experience with specific journal writing tools designed to spark new
avenues of thinking, organize and manage the writing process, and
set the stage for uncensored, secure self-expression.
9. Learn from
your own experiences and incorporate them into your publishable
writing.
After just a few weeks or months of keeping a journal, go back to
earlier journal entries. You may be surprised how fresh your writing
is and how you can mine your journal entries by extracting rich
detailed descriptions, authentic conversations, and ideas for plots
that you already have written within your journal.
10. Have fun!
Journal writing is its own reward. Once you get started, your
journal will become another one of your good friends—one who is
always available and has the time to listen attentively.
Ruth Folit has kept a journal for 30 years. Her company's journal writing software, LifeJournal, was the winner of the McGraw-Hill Higher Education award sponsored Technology Design Competition for Computers and Writing 2000. Ruth can be reached at rfolit@lifejournal.com.
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