When I Don’t Feel Like Journaling
There are many days I don’t journal… In fact, there are many days I don’t feel like it at all, and days, weeks, sometimes even months go by. But when I start again, I always think, why did I stop when it helps me so much to let things out.
I think I’ve been most consistent with journaling during difficult times in my life. It gave me a moment to breathe, to let things out, and to hold onto something until the next day. It helped me find a sense of stillness, a chance to be thoughtful, and in my case, to feel grateful, even in moments of chaos or confusion.
I have, over time, started to incorporate it into my regular life, when things are not chaotic, when I’m not just hoping for the days to pass quickly, but instead trying to be more intentional with myself and others. I believe journaling is a practice shaped by what you need in the moment and where you are in life.
Journaling gives me space. Unlike a quick text or voice memo, putting pen to paper slows my thoughts down and gives me time.
Maybe that’s why, when I do it, I start to put how I feel into words.
I usually start with gratitude. The small things. Where I am in life. The people around me. That hasn’t always come naturally, but writing has helped me become more aware of it. It helps me notice what’s sitting in my chest, things that aren’t always easy to say out loud or put into words. Writing gives it time and shape.
There’s no perfect way to journal.
It’s simply a personal moment. There’s no judgment in how or where you write.
There’s only the moment when you decide to put something down, whatever it is. And in that moment, you decide how much to release or whether to come back to it the next day.
Most of the time, the only thing that has ever gotten in the way of journaling daily has been me. Even a few minutes of writing has made a meaningful difference in my life, in my hope, and in how I move through the present and the next day.