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Journaling: A Tool for the Spirit
by Susie Michelle Cortright
The fountain of personal wisdom may be as close as your
nearest pen.
Thats because the single most essential instrument for nurturing your spirit is a
personal journal.
The word journal may mean 100 different things to 100 different people. For a
psychologist, it denotes a tool for a patients self-analysis. For the writer, it may
be a notebook of ideas and ramblings. For most of us, the word denotes a day-to-day diary,
a log of action and reaction.
For me, a journal is a notebook of ideas and solutions that I have discovered using my
conscious and subconscious mind.
Journaling is a remarkable device for easing worry and obsession, for identifying hopes
and fears and for allowing your creative self to expand, increasing your level of energy
and confidence. It harnesses the power to tap into successively deeper layers of your
subconscious mind while it zaps the nervous, passive energy that ties your stomach in
knots and leads to more guilt and worry.
Journals are tools to help you discover the wisdom you already possess. Sometimes, this
wisdom will surprise you. Other times, it will challenge you. Always, it will come
directly from you, empowering you to trust yourself and to take action by giving you the
deep-seated knowledge that you know more than you think you do.
This feeling of power and self-trust will translate into a more confident mother, wife,
and spirit. You will already know where to turn when faced with difficult decisions. You
will have found the answers within yourself, and you will return there for further
instruction.
In addition to revealing your personal insight and wisdom, the journaling process can help
dispel feelings of loneliness and confusion by helping you discover a unity within
yourself. As your conscious and subconscious mind work together to solve problems in
black-and-white, the ideas are validated and more easily applied, even if you never share
these ideas with a soul.
Rules of the Game
The act of
writing has tremendous potential to tap the subconscious and to arrange conscious thoughts
in a clear pattern as words flow from your mind down your arm, into your hand and across
the page.
Banish your internal editor. This is that voice that booms from the darkest recesses of
your brain: You shouldnt be writing that, or Someone might see
that you wrote that."
Here are a few tricks to banish this frightening little voice. Write quickly,
allowing the words to freefall from your subconscious. Keep writing, no matter what.
Dont erase or cross-out any words. If youre heading in a direction you would
rather avoid, start a new paragraph. These accidental forays may be telltale signs for
issues you need to address. And erasing just takes more time that you could be using to
focus on you. Date each entry in your journal. Note the time, place, and any details
regarding your mood and emotions that will be necessary for context when you read back on
your work.
After you have finished a journal entry, take a walk or get up for a glass of water before
you reread your entry, and remember to reread this entry with compassion. Then, write an
Insight Line--a sentence or two about what you think the piece is trying to tell you.
Sometimes this Insight is as plain as day. Other times, it will take a little reading
between the lines. If the subject on which you are writing is a delicate one, there is
nothing wrong with putting off re-reading it for a few hours, days, even weeks. Some
entries you may not read again at all. The Insight comes from the act of writing itself,
the Insight Line simply helps you discover it.
The Techniques
There are as many journaling techniques as there
are people who practice the craft. The important thing is simply to explore the underlying
layers of your mind--using whatever conduit works for you.
Get creative with the techniques you use. We all have a subconscious mind that
communicates to us in a different way. If you are stuck and have nothing to write, try
recording snippets of conversations, facts, feelings, fantasies, descriptions,
impressions, quotes, images, and ideas. Draw pictures. Make a collage from a magazine. Use
the technique that best suits the way in which you express yourself. You know your own
mind and how it best communicates with the world. I promise youll have an even
better sense of the way in which your mind works after the completion of a few journal
entries.
One method that works well for me, particularly when the ideas dont flow on their
own, is called clustering. Put the central idea in the center of the page and circle it.
Then, without pause, make associations, placing them in new bubbles and tying them to the
main idea. The result is a complex matrix of ideas, many of which you didnt even
know you had. If you wish, compose these thoughts later into a cohesive essay that says
exactly what you want to say. Or simply move on.
What you need
Paper. The only thing you need is a notebook so
your ideas dont get lost. Some journal-writers swear by the loose-leaf notebooks so
they can insert pages, but Im always afraid of losing some of the more personal
pages, and I dont want anything to inhibit my ability to write freely and
honestly.
Other journal-writers opt for the expensive, hard-bound journals, reasoning that the
journal will be a keepsake. These work just fine, as long as you are able to write freely
in such a formal book. Some of the things you will be writing will not be pretty. If you
are afraid of making mistakes or you feel inhibited with this kind of notebook,
youre better off with a plain old spiral bound from Wal-Mart (my personal favorite.)
Some of you will be
creating more drawings than essays. If thats you, consider a wire-bound sketch pad.
Pen. Treat yourself to just the right pen. One that makes you feel important. Test some of
the expensive pens. See how they feel in your hand and how the ink rolls across the page.
The best choice is one that allows you to write quickly and smoothly. I personally love
the easy-flow fountain pens because the color comes out so bold that it makes me feel more
confident. And it practically glides itself across the page.
Environment. Your journal should always be there when you need it. Write on the bus, in
the office, or late at night when insomnia strikes. If you have the time, a regular
writing ritual can be very soothing.
If you do wish to write in the same place and at the same time every day, create the ideal
writing space for you. Maybe youre most comfortable in a rocking chair surrounded by
pillows and candles and Schubert tunes. Or maybe you prefer silence and a cherry wood desk
or a gentle breeze and a rickety porch swing.
Whether you set a time for writing each day or you do it on the fly, make sure the time
you spend writing in your journal is time solely devoted to you and your task. Your
journal is designed to nurture you.
Susie Michelle Cortright is the founder and
publisher of Momscape, an online magazine devoted to nurturing the nurturers. Visit her at
http://www.momscape.com, where you
may read more inspiring articles and essays, subscribe to Momscape's free online magazine,
mailto:momscape-subscribe@onelist.com,
and register to win free pampering packages.
Article courtesy of MediaPeak, http://www.mediapeak.com.
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