Does anyone use a journal?
Does anyone use a journal?
Hi All! I was just wondering if anyone uses a journal to keep record of their thoughts/feelings during the recovery process. I have been thinking of doing this and wondered if it has helped anyone.
Hi,
I did and it helped me a lot.
It wasn't at the beginning of my recovery but it came at a point where I was stuck in guilt and shame and unable to forgive myself. Someone suggested journalling to me and it was hard to get started, but it really helped. I think it's a great tool.
I did and it helped me a lot.
It wasn't at the beginning of my recovery but it came at a point where I was stuck in guilt and shame and unable to forgive myself. Someone suggested journalling to me and it was hard to get started, but it really helped. I think it's a great tool.
Member
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 62
Ugh I think I would DIE without my journal!! I seriously can feel the difference in my mood when I don't write opposed to when I get it all out on paper. I think some times we can exhaust our support systems so it's good to use a journal as another outlet. It's also a place where we can be COMPLETELY honest.
I find when I start pouring all my emotions on to paper... even after an entry that has brought me to tears as I vigorously write it all out... I feel better... My message to "myself" eventually takes a positive spin. I start to build myself up and throw out the things I need to get myself to do.
Anyway, it definitely couldn't hurt!!
I find when I start pouring all my emotions on to paper... even after an entry that has brought me to tears as I vigorously write it all out... I feel better... My message to "myself" eventually takes a positive spin. I start to build myself up and throw out the things I need to get myself to do.
Anyway, it definitely couldn't hurt!!
I journal. I've done it very sporadically most of my adult life, with months or years between entries. I started keeping a (more or less) daily journal since I got sober almost three years ago.
I write about things that are bothering me. Or things that make me happy. I write about pretty much anything.
One of the interesting things about recording my thoughts is that I can look at what I was thinking about a year or two or three ago. I can see how I am changing.
How do I do it? I use a web-based email service. It allows me to save drafts of messages. I write myself an email and work on it all month. At the end of the month I mail it to myself and stash it in a journal folder.
Tomorrow is May 1st. I will begin a new draft called "Diary, May, 2011". It will look something like this:
"5/1, #1060
May day at last! I plan to go mountain biking at the state park this morning, etc."
Note: barring relapse, tomorrow should be my 1060th day of sobriety.
Good luck with your journaling! I hope you enjoy it as much as I do
I write about things that are bothering me. Or things that make me happy. I write about pretty much anything.
One of the interesting things about recording my thoughts is that I can look at what I was thinking about a year or two or three ago. I can see how I am changing.
How do I do it? I use a web-based email service. It allows me to save drafts of messages. I write myself an email and work on it all month. At the end of the month I mail it to myself and stash it in a journal folder.
Tomorrow is May 1st. I will begin a new draft called "Diary, May, 2011". It will look something like this:
"5/1, #1060
May day at last! I plan to go mountain biking at the state park this morning, etc."
Note: barring relapse, tomorrow should be my 1060th day of sobriety.
Good luck with your journaling! I hope you enjoy it as much as I do
Forward we go...side by side-Rest In Peace
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Serene In Dixie
Posts: 36,740
Yes...I did for about 5 years...it was immensley useful....
No Blogging or FB for me tho...mine was too personal and
loved ones mentioned could be upset .
No Blogging or FB for me tho...mine was too personal and
loved ones mentioned could be upset .
It is a good reminder of how quickly things can change for the better.
L
I did at the beginning because I wanted to note the physical and emotional changes.
The thing about it that was most useful was that I wrote down some of the reasons I wanted to quit. A few times I needed those reminders why I was quitting.
The thing about it that was most useful was that I wrote down some of the reasons I wanted to quit. A few times I needed those reminders why I was quitting.
I also got into visual journalling a few years back and now use words and scribbles. How I feel today...a big grey scribble! (This doesn't require artistic talent.)
I do. i find it immensley helpful and I carry it in my bag with me at all times. If I can't talk to someone when I am having a rough moment or whatever, i can at least write it down
I have started to blog a little on here too and have found it very cathartic...hope you find that writing it all out helps you
I have started to blog a little on here too and have found it very cathartic...hope you find that writing it all out helps you
I have always been an avid journaller and agree with this. I found it impossible to deny I had a problem with alcohol when I was writing the same thing over and over...different countries, different years, same concerns about my drinking. I have also got benefit from what I wrote when drunk (what could be read!) Who was that nutcase? Oh, me on wine!
I also got into visual journalling a few years back and now use words and scribbles. How I feel today...a big grey scribble! (This doesn't require artistic talent.)
I also got into visual journalling a few years back and now use words and scribbles. How I feel today...a big grey scribble! (This doesn't require artistic talent.)
I adore journaling. I've been doing it for a very long time prior to when my struggles with addiction came 11 years ago. It's always been real helpful for me to have a positive outlet. I encourage all to journal/blog.
-Jess
-Jess
I filled a whole notebook within the first two months. I'm about to finish the second notebook. I find it very useful to put my thoughts and emotions on the page. And, I like a private journal because I can be totally honest and specific.
LSNP . . . I don't secure mine, but I've heard of some people writing an opening letter that any snooping person would find that basically says, "don't read this, and if you do, anything you read that upsets you will not be my responsibility but yours for reading against this warning." A good idea, I think, if there is anyone in your household who does not understand this basic rule of privacy.
LSNP . . . I don't secure mine, but I've heard of some people writing an opening letter that any snooping person would find that basically says, "don't read this, and if you do, anything you read that upsets you will not be my responsibility but yours for reading against this warning." A good idea, I think, if there is anyone in your household who does not understand this basic rule of privacy.
Forward we go...side by side-Rest In Peace
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Serene In Dixie
Posts: 36,740
LSNP,...I lived alone so there was no one to snoop.
but A friend of mine kept his under the mattress.
I still think paper is more private than net journeling
.
but A friend of mine kept his under the mattress.
I still think paper is more private than net journeling
.
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Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 245
I used to journal a ton, but it became a burden for me after I started expecting myself to write X amount every day, review Y amount every weekend and Z amount at the end of every month. Now I just write down two or three thoughts a day, and I usually go back and look at my journals once or twice a year. I agree with Reggie, this site works better than a journal in many respects.
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