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From a conversation with Luann Budd about journal writing
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What keeps people from using a journal?
LUANN: I think many believe that a journal
must be written in every day. Daily disciplines are hard to maintain, so
people don't even try. Others think that journaling is only effective for
people who are good writers. If, for whatever reason, they don't think of
themselves as a good writer, then they don't think journaling is for them.
Some have also worried about how to organize a blank book into a journal.
Without instruction in how to get started, they are paralyzed.
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What was the inspiration for your
book-Journal Keeping: Writing for Spiritual Growth? |
LUANN:
A friend asked me to lead a workshop on journaling. She said
that she'd been interested in journaling but had no idea what she might
write about. She knew that I had been a journal keeper for many years
and had found it helpful so she thought that I might be able to help
others like her to learn what to do with their journals. To be very
honest, I had no idea what I did with my journal -- I just knew that I
benefited from writing. So in preparation to teach the workshop I looked
through my old journals and the journals of other people to see what we
wrote about. I was also getting my Masters Degree in Composition so I
was reading and writing a lot about the benefits of writing. The
workshop combined what we knew in the field of Composition about the
benefits of private writing and what I had found personally beneficial
in my own journaling. The workshop was well received and I was asked to
teach it again and again. People asked for handouts, so I prepared a
packet of handouts. And at some point, someone encouraged me to prepare
a book proposal so that the material could be more widely available. |
 | What differentiates a spiritual journal from
other types of journals? |
People use blank books for a whole variety of purposes.
Some journals are really more of a diary -- a recording of what has
happened during the day. Others are written for the purpose of helping
grandchildren to better understand their grandparents. I have a journal
that is totally centered on prayer. I have another that is totally
focused on evangelism and recording conversations that I'm having with
my spiritually interested friends. I also have a journal that I keep to
record what I eat and the progress I'm making toward establishing a
healthy/balanced lifestyle. So, to answer what I think differentiates a
spiritual journal from other types of journals has everything to do with
the purpose for keeping the journal. In Journal Keeping, I was trying
to help people see how they might use a journal for the purpose of
growing spiritually. If the purpose of your writing is to see the Lord
in your life, to better understand the Scriptures, to grow in devotional
practices, to keep lists for prayer, to capture quotes that you find
spiritually encouraging...then I'd say you're keeping a "spiritual
journal." |
 | What role does journaling play in a journaler's life? |
- LUANN: I think the role depends on the person, and
it changes over time. For example, I need to write to think, and to
process what's happening in my life. Others who journal think and
process in conversation with others, not in writing. Journaling can
play the role of a friend, a mentor or a critic. Journaling can be how
I make my confession. Journaling can be how I keep my life balanced.
The role journaling plays in my life changes morning by morning, but
always, it is my companion through life.
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 | So how does someone get started and stick with journaling? |
- LUANN: Getting started is probably as simple as
getting a blank book or spiral binder, making a decision that nothing
in the book will be made public, and beginning to write. There are a
few other fundamental principles discussed in my book (giving yourself
time, and being free to choose what to write about, realizing that
there isn't a "right" way to journal). "Sticking" with journaling is
probably a result of seeing the personal benefits and not having the
expectation that you must write daily.
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 | Is
Journal
Keeping
written just for writers? |
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LUANN: Actually, this book is written for a broad
spectrum of people. The beginning chapters are written for those who
have wished that they were journal keepers but never knew how to
start. They were also written for those who know that they can't write
well, and as a result have thought that they could not keep a journal.
After these initial chapters, the book is addressed to people who may
already be writers but certainly, they would not have to be. The
examples are not high or lofty. Writing is simply communicating
thoughts on paper. Whether we are writers or not, all of us have
thoughts. Expressing those thoughts on paper will benefit everyone.
Even experienced journal keepers have said that the book gives a
comprehensive overview of journaling possibilities accessible to the
beginner, while at the same time offering a new challenge for the
experienced.
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How can a spiritual journal help a teen cope with
problems? |
LUANN:
I believe that one of the greatest benefits of writing is the clarity
that it brings. Often we can have thoughts and feelings that influence
us that we really haven't spoken about with anyone. As long as the
thoughts are just in our head they don't have to stand up to logic the
same way the thoughts need to if we are sharing them with a friend.
Sometimes we may be embarrassed about something and we don't feel
comfortable sharing it with anyone. Sometimes we may not have anyone
that we feel we can totally trust to keep what we share
confidential. If we don't have anyone we can talk to, writing can help
us get the thoughts out of our head and force us to be logical.
If we write about our problems, we may come up with solutions that
never occurred to us until we wrote about it. I think that our brains
are a little like computers and problems can fill up our RAM and keep us
from being able to process information. When we write about our
problems, we are freeing up RAM. We can think more clearly about our
problems. Writing also helps us to get a little distance from what's
bothering us. Just by putting our whole side of the story on paper we
can feel that we've been heard...and we can put aside what we wrote for
a couple of days. When we come back to it, we can be a bit more
objective and view the problem less emotionally perhaps and be a bit
more rational.
If we have clarity about what the problem is, we are a lot closer to
being able to determine ways to resolve what's bothering us. Certainly
there are problems that are too big for us to solve on our own. When we
encounter problems that seem insurmountable, that's when we definitely
need to talk with a guidance counselor at school or a pastor at our
church or our parents. Writing can help us see that a problem is too
big for us and give us clarity so that when we do talk with someone, we
know what the issue is and what we want to say.
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Why does one need to keep a spiritual journal private? Can we not
share it with other teens?
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LUANN: I think that the value of determining to keep a journal
private comes from the honesty that we can write with, knowing that no
one else is going to read what we write. I think that there's a real
temptation to try to be someone we're not if we are going to let others
read our writing. We try to appear cool, or spiritual, or in control
when that's not really (if we were going to be totally honest) how we
feel at all. Also, if we are going to share our journal, we may only
write about surface issues. We may not feel comfortable writing about
how betrayed we felt, or how angry someone made us, or how unfair our
mother treated us if we planned to our journal and we worried about what
would happen if it wasn't kept confidential. Maybe people would enjoy
keeping 2 journals -- one that is private and another that is public.
How can teens start and keep writing a spiritual journal?
LUANN: I think that they just need to start writing and developing the
habit of freewriting about whatever comes to mind for 10 minutes a day
or every couple of days will help them to get used to thinking on paper.
A question is often very helpful to reflect on. Some questions that I
often begin with are "Where have I seen God in my life today? Do I feel
close to God--why or why not? If they feel some emotion as they are
writing, then that topic might become the starting point for their next
writing. Exploring why something is emotional for us can be very
insightful. If people want to capture ideas that they hear that
they think are important, a journal is great for that. After listening
to a sermon, jotting down one main idea that they are taking away or
what to continue thinking about for the week is a great practice. What
did God say to me today through the sermon? Or if they have piritual
goals (better understanding prayer, sharing my faith with my friends,
reading the Bible every day, being nice to my brothers,
serving others) that they want to pursue...having a page or two that
helps them track their progress can be very beneficial. The most
important thing is to just start writing...they'll figure out what they
need to write about as they go. It's funny how once we start keeping a
journal, ideas for what we want to write about will come to mind as we
are doing other things -- like taking a shower or doing the dishes. The
best way to start is to just begin--once we see the benefit it brings
to us, we'll want to continue the practice.
Any advice to teen journalers out there who might want to start a
spiritual journal?
LUANN: The best advice I have to give is for you to use a journal for
YOUR purposes -- what you have to write about today is not the same as
what anyone else needs to write about. You get to decide what you write
about, when you write, how often you write, etc. You shouldn't feel
obligated to write in your journal. No where in Scripture are we
commanded to write in our journals. It should be fun, enjoyable, not
obligatory. Keeping a journal is a wonderful tool for YOU to use the way
that makes the most sense to YOU. The choice is YOURS. You are free to
write, or not to write as makes sense to you. Use your journal as a
tool to accomplish YOUR purpose for writing. How you use it today will
be different from how you will want to use it in a month or two. Share
ideas with friends. Try some of the approaches that I share in Journal
Keeping. See what you find to be the most helpful to you as you
pursue a deeper understanding of the Lord. The purpose is really to
grow in your spiritual life which involves growing in your love for the
Lord and in your knowledge of Him, growing in your love for other people
and your service to them, and in sharing your faith -- use
your spiritual journal in any way that you find helpful to you as you
pursue God.
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