Journaling Just Works
This is a community for people who use journals, planners, bullet journals, art/junk journals and diaries of any kind (both paper and digital). Whether you're journaling for productivity, self-help, mindfulness, memory-keeping, creativity, project mamagement or for any other purpose, this is the place to share your practises, ask for advice and get inspired.
RULES:
-Read the sticky.
-Keep it on-topic.
-No NSFW content.
-No spam - but sharing some great journaling resources is welcome (just once per resource is sufficient - check past posts first).
-Be nice - by all means offer constructive criticism if it's asked for but don't just tell someone their spread sucks.
-Absolutely no racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, etc. No religious evangelicalism and no political content whatsoever.
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I have two journals, the first (kept for last ~6 years) is a place where I can vent all my thoughts without autocensure, I don't write there too regularily, so it ends up in a mixture of negativity and traveling notes (while traveling I allways feel full of thoughts I need to restructure in the journal).
The second is a dream journal. I've started it in purpose of lucid dreaming (that never happened), now I keep it just becouse dreams are beautifull and journaling them helps to remember them better. This journal goes in cycles: start dreamwriting - get better and better in it - spend more than hour dreamwriting every morning - stop it to save time - let it be some time.
I have also a notebook where I copy poems I like, but this is rather empty. And also a reader's journal.
Could you elaborate on the concept of commonplace book? (Unless it gets too personal.) How do you decide what is important enough to write there? How vast are the topics you keep together?