Author Archive
11 Benefits from Spiritual Journaling
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We are a “what do I get out of it?” society, aren’t we? We expect every transaction we make to result in a discounted cost to us, not just a bargain but a super bargain like a give away. If the house is for sale as a foreclosure, we expect the sale price to be 1/2 of the normal price.
Journaling is no different; we expend our time and energy when we could be doing twenty other things so we expect that the resultant benefits will hugely outweigh our perceived cost. Let me list the benes that I have found; you run the calculator:
- You get to write a letter to and dialogue with God or your Higher Power. Yes, I know he knows what we are thinking but when He sees us write it down and communicate on paper, I believe that it means more; it holds more weight.
- You get to know yourself better. This will happen as you go back and read your earlier journal entries; you will wonder at what you wrote and what you have done since and where you are now.
- Writing is healing; we get to lay out all of our emotions and examine them like a doctor or a lab technician.
- Recording our daily gratitudes, ever so small as a smile, will quickly show us that He is wanting to love us and give us pleasure.
- We get to empty our “worry bucket” and free our mind to start afresh on the new day. No hold-over worries to cloud the arrival of fresh ideas.
- Emboding our inner voice is an amazing benefit. Martha Graham said, “… and because there is only one of you in all time, its expression is unique. And if you block it, it will never exist through any other medium and be lost, the world will not have it.”
- Stress reduction — when our angers and feelings of disappoinment gain control of us, we become frozen; writing them down makes them smaller and lightens our load.
- We enlighten our relationship with God or the Higher Power. Writing down our prayers to Him allow us to show Him that we are interested in the love he gives us.
- Our discernment powers become sharpened. We can analyze our choices from the spiritual standpoint; writing the process down enables us to see where we are going.
- We can record our daily accomplishments and affirmations. We need a pat on the back every day and this is a good way to do that.
- We grow closer to God by putting “spiritual” into the writing process. It is more than a daily log of events in our life; it records the spiritual connections of those events.
© Copyrighted 2010
“I See You” Journaling
Posted by: | CommentsWhy do we not take more time to observe and really see someone? We glance over a person’s face but then one hour later we can’t remember enough features to recognize them again when we see them on the street. We give everything and everybody what I call, the “big picture snapshot.” We don’t take the time for a focused observation to really look at the details which characterize one tree from another tree, one person from another person, one sunset from another sunset. We always act as if we are at 20,000 ft with a look time of 1/100 second and then our writing (and our knowing) is bland, neutral, and featureless.
I’m sure you have figured out the line “I See You” by now; it is the greeting of the Na’vi, the people of the planet of Pandora from the AVATAR story. Because, they really “saw” the person they were greeting; they noticed every detail and linked their whole being to each other.
How can you appreciate the uniqueness of God’s creations if you don’t focus on the minute features of them? If you don’t link to them and really See Them, not just Look at Them?
Try this “Really Seeing” exercise shown to me by Linda Beaureguard; all you need is a strawberry, your journal and to actively engage all of your senses.
- Hold the strawberry at arm’s length. Look at it; notice green leaves, red color and globular shape. Turn it around and look at all of its sides. This is our normal viewing position except we are devoting more time to it. Write down in your journal your first impressions.
- Bring the strawberry in to 12” away. Look at it now; notice shades of green leaves, shades of red color, some white color. Indentations or segments. Seeds on segments, color of seeds, shape. Write down in your journal your first impressions at this range.
- Bring the strawberry in to 3” away. Look at it now. Rub your finger over it and record its texture. Smell it. How many leaves? Stem? Segments? Tip? Write down in your journal your first impressions at this range.
- Take a very small bite. Taste it; what is its texture? Color of the hole left. Smell it. Swallow it. Write down in your journal your first impressions after this observation.
- Take a larger bite. Any differences? Write those down in your journal.
- Eat the entire strawberry (not the leaves). Write down what you feel about this step; eating the whole fruit yourself.
- Journal what you felt or learned about this entire observation experience after reading all of your writing passages.
The next time you are talking to a person or observing a flower or viewing a landscape, try Seeing and then Journal your observations the first chance you get.
© Copyrighted 2010. All Rights Reserved.
STAYING STARTED IN JOURNALING
Posted by: | Comments“The indispensable first step to getting the things you want out of life is this: decide what you want.” – Ben Stein
The major source of a decay of personal energy in journal writing is caused by a lack of commitment to what we want. Most of the time we neglect writing down our SMART goal for our journaling effort and commiting to achieve that goal.
A SMART goal is one that is:
• Specific,
• Measurable,
• Attainable,
• Relevant and
• Time-bound.
Writing down your SMART goal is required to formalize those five elements. One way to do that is with the form I have provided below; you can just check-off most of your choices.
MY JOURNALING CONTRACT
Starting ___/___/___, I commit to journal every day for the next __30 days __60 days___More (specify)
I am going to journal each day (minimum) __ 5 mins __ 10 mins __ 30 mins ___ More (specify)
I am going to journal __ Within 30 mins of getting up __ Within 1 hour of getting up __ Within 1 hour before going to bed ___At a set time (specify)
I am going to journal __At home __At work __________At another place (specify) __Various (while waiting)
I am going to use this method to journal __Daily record of events __Reactions to events __Dialogues __Prayer __Interpret Bible verses _______________________Other (specify)
The tool I am going to use for my journaling is __Journaling software on computer __Wordprocessor on computer __Notebook __3X5 File Card _______ Other (specify)
The top three goals I want to achieve from my journaling are:
1. ____________________________
2. ____________________________
3. ____________________________
I am going to be accountable to _________________________ every _______________ for this contract.
My Printed Name ________________________________________
My Signature____________________________________________
Date _____________________
© Copyrighted. All Rights Reserved.
“Sacred Chaos” – A Book For Journalers
Posted by: | Comments“Sacred Chaos – Spiritual Disciplines for the Life You Have”, Tricia McCary Rhodes, 2008, $15.00, InterVarsity Press, ISBN 978-0-8308-3512-6
Tricia was going to write a book about sacred spaces, those times and places where we commune with God. Only, there wasn’t any space at all available in her life, just a continuous rush from one appointment to another meeting to fixing dinner to… She came to realize that in any day, really in every day, God is near to us and accompanying our spiritual journey. So she wrote this book to tell about her discoveries and to pass on experiments, retreat tips and ways-to-look-at our daily life as a truly sacred environment.
A passage from Matthew, 6:5, sets the stage for the book, “When you come before God, don’t turn that into a theatrical production…All these people making a regular show out of their prayers, hoping for stardom! Do you think God sits in a box seat?” The author’s list of questions to ask about finding “quiet time” for prayer amplify the reasons we use as an excuse to not developing a relationship with God. But her first exercise for the reader follows: practice a two minute miracle for the next seven days to develop a resistance to prayer. What a challenge! So simple yet something we all can find in a day.
She continues the book with similar small but building-upon steps through some chapters titled “Kairos Connections, Spiritual Sight, Redefining Prayer, In Love with Living Word, and Getting Soaked on the Sabbath.” Each chapter ends with a “Making the Chaos Sacred” exercise for the reader as a way to reinforce the chapter’s message.
In the last chapter, “Seasons of the Soul,” Tricia writes about her own spiritual journey and the one thing she would do differently: “to relax and try to glean from the here and now, knowing that God is always at work, no matter how things appear to me.” Appendix A has descriptions of longer Experiments in Prayer and a One-Day Experiment in Prayer as a Community. Appendix B lists the different attributes of God as found in Scriptures while Appendix C lists the Descriptions of Jesus as found in the Scriptures.
I consider this book an amazing find; Tricia’s stories of her experiences and the experiments she has used (and offers to the reader) to find prayer time were a fresh view at tackling a common situation. Actually, the book will help you to run to God and stay with him as you “turn chaos into something sacred.”
Tricia McCary Rhodes
is a writer (five previous books) and full-time Christian minister (31 years) having co-founded New Hope Church in San Diego, CA.
A Joint Journal For Maintaining Those Romantic Unions
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A University of Texas study found that when couples wrote about their relationships for 20 minutes at a time for three days, they were more likely to be together three months later. I think that may be too brief of a journaling time to create a “more lasting” relationship, but there is something about writing that prompts good feelings. If you both take the time to use pencil and paper, or establish an email/IM message conversation daily, it has a way of maintaining those romantic emotions.
So, jointly pick up a journal and a place in the bookshelf to store it. Then you and your significant other can alternately write in the journal and place it back on the shelf for the other person to pick it up the next day to continue the process. Or mimic the process using online tools.
Start out with one sentence and then increase the amount of writing; “I love you” is necessary but not sufficient. Just Journal.
Ending Your Day With Journaling
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Most daily devotional books and journaling teachers say that “morning” is the by far the best time to write in your spiritual journal. They maintain that by spending your just-awakening time with God, planning your day and writing down your observations from the previous day, you can focus better. Yes, you have to get up earlier for solitude in most households, and I would have to skip my reading of the early morning newspaper but you can have your morning coffee while you reflect and journal. My choice, though, is to journal in the evening as the day is ending. Read More→
Why Write Your OWN Business Journal?
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A Business Journal is kept and published weekly in almost every large city, like Charlotte, Los Angeles, Phoenix, etc. They record and publish the comprehensive business news happenings, the analysis of the local economy, the announcement of new companies coming to or leaving town, the names of organizations hiring and firing, real estate transactions, people promotions, etc. Read More→
2 Sentence Journaling?
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Why another journal and a totally different type of journal keeping, you say? Well, I’ve started so many journals before that I’ve never finished. During the day, there are lots of short times during the day that I could use to journal if I would just write two sentences. That journaling is not complicated and a very manageable task. I find it is like jotting down the small pieces of your life puzzle and later, at the end of the week when you reflect on the daily two sentences, you can discern the big picture, the meaning of it. Read More→
How to Start a Journaling Support Group
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What does a “group” have to do with a singular activity like journal keeping? I maintain that a group is the best format to study journaling, share the entries in member’s journals and support each member in their journaling journey. The members of the group will motivate each other to enhance their journaling and each member will be available to hold the other members accountable to their journaling discipline. Read More→
So, What is a Journal?
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Journals, pen strokes on paper or keystrokes on a computer, allow us a safe way to explore topics with ourselves. They are, in fact, a reflection of our soul on the mirror of life.
Spiritual Journals give us a place to record our honest and vulnerable journey with God. We can record what God’s been doing in our lives and we can spiritually share ourselves with Him and examine ways for spiritual growth. Journaling is one important spiritual discipline to employ to achieve a grace-centered life. Read More→



