How Journaling Can Improve Your Mental Health

Journaling can have a positive impact on your mental health regardless of whether you’re a great writer or not. Being good at it isn’t the point. Doing it is.

How Does Journaling Improve My Mental Health?

Journaling is a method of self-care that helps people understand their trauma and clarify their emotions.

It has been proven to improve sleep, build a stronger immune system, and process trauma.

How Often Should I Journal and For How Long?

When people think of writing in a journal, they think it must be a daily task. This may be true for people who like to regularly write. However, if you don’t write on a regular basis, you can try journaling as an exercise during moments of stress or trauma. During this time you should write for 15-30 minutes for 3-4 days.

What Do I Write About?

Journaling is a time to let go and explore your emotions. For many it helps clarify traumatic situations. You don’t have to write specifically about trauma. If you are struggling to find a topic here are a few:
1. Make a list of goals
2. Write about someone you are grateful for
3. Write a detailed description of your dream day

The 54321 Challenge

Write 5 things you saw, 4 things you heard, 3 things you smelled that day, 2 things you ate, and 1 unique texture.

Below is an infographic on Journaling that you are free to share or download for yourself as a reminder or reference so you can incorporate journaling into your life as a way to boost your mental wellbeing. Remember to take care of YOURSELF.

Journaling for Mental Health - Infographic - Boldly Me

Download INFOGRAPHIC as a PDF

60 Journaling Prompt Ideas

For additional ideas on what to write about, try these:

  1. List 5 things causing you stress, but that YOU have the ability to change
  2. What three ordinary things bring you the most joy?
  3. Describe what a perfect, stress-free day looks like for you.
  4. How is the way you deal with stress different now than when you were younger?
  5. Discuss 5 things you wish others knew about you.
  6. Write about what you love about your life right now – think of only positive things.
  7. If you could write a letter to any one fear, which one would it be?
  8. What has your stress taught you about yourself?
  9. Write one paragraph about what made you happy today.
  10. Identify three short term goals and one long term goal.
  11. What is a self-care strategy you’ve always been curious in trying?
  12. What inspires you?
  13. Meditate quietly and focus on your breathing. Then write a journal entry about your current state of mind.
  14. Share gratitude for 3 people who are supporting you at this point in your life.
  15. Make a list of 15 things that make you happy.
  16. If someone (friend or stranger) asked for help with their anxiety, what would you say to them?
  17. What are your best character traits?
  18. Write down three to five things that trigger feelings of anxiety in you and identify one to three coping strategies you can attempt to implement in response to these.
  19. Pick one positive word you’d like to focus on today and describe what it makes you feel or what you associate with it.
  20. Write down a list of ‘regrets’. Either throw them away or toss them into a fire. (Let go of past regrets & move on).
  21. What are some internal thoughts that make you feel worse?
  22. Write a short love letter to some object or place that makes you happy.
  23. Describe a situation in which you helped someone else. How do you think it made them feel? How did it make you feel?
  24. Write about the last time you cried. What caused you to cry?
  25. Write about the last time you laughed really hard. What was so funny?
  26. List three obstacles lying in the way of your contentment or happiness. Then, list two potential solutions to begin overcoming each obstacle.
  27. What three things would you share with your younger self? What three questions would you want to ask an older version of yourself?
  28. What self-care strategies have you used in the past? Rate them from 1-10, 10 being the most effective and helpful, 1 being the least.
  29. What areas of self-care do you need to improve?
  30. Write a letter to your body (e.g. a love letter, a list of complaints, an apology, etc.)
  31. When is the last time you did something for someone else? What did you do and how did it make you feel?
  32. Write about how different you were 5 years ago (or 10 years ago, or 20…etc.).
  33. What place makes you feel most peaceful? Describe that place using all five senses.
  34. What are some negative things in your life you give too much energy to?
  35. Write a message for yourself on bad days.
  36. Make yourself 10 promises and detail each one.
  37. Write a letter to the future YOU.
  38. Identify one area where you’d like to improve. Then, list three specific actions you can take to create that change.
  39. Describe yourself using the first 10 words that come to mind. Then, list 10 words that you’d like to use to describe yourself. List a few ways to transform those descriptions into reality.
  40. Describe a hardship you have had. How does it make you feel reflecting back on it? What do you feel you learned?
  41. What makes you feel fulfilled?
  42. Draw a picture of what anxiety means to you.
  43. What difficult thoughts or emotions come up most frequently for you?
  44. What are three things that can instantly disrupt a good mood and bring you down? What strategies do you use to counter these effects?
  45. What are your strengths in relationships (kindness, empathy, etc.)?
  46. Write a letter to someone who has done you wrong. Discuss what they did and how it made you feel. Try to forgive them and rip it up if it feels right.
  47. If you could achieve anything in your life, what would it be?
  48. What five traits do you value most in potential partners?
  49. Write a list of songs that always cheer you up? Turn them into a playlist.
  50. Write a short story about someone with the same amount of stress you have – how do they overcome it?
  51. What things are you avoiding dealing with?
  52. Write a letter to someone who has been a negative influence in your life.
  53. Write a letter to someone who has had a positive influence in your life.
  54. Name and describe an accomplishment you want everyone to know about.
  55. Write about the people in your life that make you feel the most “at ease” and what they do to make you feel that way.
  56. Describe your favorite thing to do when feeling low.
  57. Write a poem (that DOESN’T HAVE TO RHYME), describing the exact opposite of yourself.
  58. Describe what love means to you in detail.
  59. Physically, how do you feel right now?
  60. What do you need right now?