There is something quietly powerful about moving a thought out of your head and onto a page. Journaling has been practised for centuries, long before it became a wellness trend, because the simple act of writing things down helps us make sense of them. You do not need beautiful handwriting, a fancy notebook, or a talent for prose. You need a few minutes and a willingness to be honest with yourself. The blank page asks nothing except your attention, and in return it can bring a surprising amount of clarity.
The obstacle for most people is not motivation but not knowing where to start, so this roundup offers six distinct methods rather than a vague instruction to journal. Each has a different flavour and purpose. Some are structured and gentle, ideal for people who freeze at an empty page. Others are looser and more freeing, better suited to those who want to let their thoughts spill out without rules. We chose these six because they are well-established, genuinely accessible to beginners, and require nothing more than a notebook and pen or the notes app you already own.
Worth saying plainly: journaling is a lovely tool for everyday reflection and processing, but it is not therapy, and it is not a treatment for mental health conditions. For many people it complements professional support beautifully, and for everyday stress and self-understanding it can stand happily on its own. If writing ever surfaces feelings that feel too heavy to hold alone, that is a good moment to reach out to a professional. With that in mind, here are six ways to put pen to paper, chosen for how easily anyone can begin them today, whatever their relationship with writing.
1. Gratitude Journaling
Writing down a few things you are grateful for, whether three lines each morning or a fuller reflection at night, gently shifts attention toward what is going well. It is one of the most accessible practices there is, and its simplicity is exactly what makes it stick. Because the bar is so low, it survives the busy and low-energy days that derail more ambitious habits, and over time the act of hunting for small good things can subtly change how you notice your ordinary life.
Why it made the six: The easiest place to start, requiring only three lines and reliably lifting your perspective.
Cost: free.
2. Morning Pages
Popularised by Julia Cameron in her book The Artist’s Way, morning pages means writing three pages of longhand, stream-of-consciousness thoughts first thing after waking. It is less about the content and more about clearing mental clutter before the day begins. Nothing you write is meant to be reread or judged, which frees you to spill out the half-formed worries and to-do lists that otherwise rattle around your head, leaving you a little clearer for whatever the day holds.
Why it made the six: A time-tested method for clearing the mind’s early-morning noise before it clutters your day.
Cost: free (the book costs around $15).
3. The Brain Dump
When your mind feels overloaded, a brain dump, writing out absolutely everything swirling around without structure or judgement, can be an enormous relief. There are no rules, no neatness required, just the act of emptying your head onto the page. Seeing your tangled thoughts laid out in front of you often makes them feel smaller and more manageable, and it is a wonderful tool to reach for on the evenings when a racing mind will not settle.
Why it made the six: The best emergency reset for an overwhelmed mind, with no structure to slow you down.
Cost: free.
4. Bullet Journaling
The bullet journal method, created by Ryder Carroll, combines to-do lists, notes and reflection in a flexible, customisable system. For people who find comfort in a little structure, it turns journaling into an organised habit that doubles as a planner. You can keep it as spare or as elaborate as you like, so it suits both the minimalist who wants a tidy list and the creative who enjoys decorating each page, and the reflection naturally rides alongside the practical planning.
Why it made the six: Ideal for organisers, blending reflection with planning in one adaptable system.
Cost: free (the book costs around $20).
5. Prompt-Based Journaling
If a blank page intimidates you, responding to a single thoughtful prompt each day gives you a gentle way in. Questions like what drained me today or what am I avoiding turn journaling into a guided conversation with yourself. A good prompt does the hard work of starting for you, so you are never staring at empty paper wondering what to say, and returning to the same few questions over weeks can reveal patterns you might otherwise miss.
Why it made the six: The friendliest option for anyone who freezes at an empty page.
Cost: free.
6. Reflective Evening Journaling
Taking a few minutes at the end of the day to review what happened, how you felt and what you learned closes the loop on your day. This gentle nightly practice can help you process events and set down worries before sleep. Writing down what is on your mind can feel like handing it to the page for safekeeping, so you are less likely to lie awake turning the same thoughts over, and noting one small win each night is a kind way to end the day.
Why it made the six: A calming way to process the day and set worries aside before bed.
Cost: free.
The Sixated take
Our honest advice is to resist the urge to build the perfect journaling system and simply pick the one method that sounds least like a chore. If you are stressed and overloaded, start with a brain dump. If you want a mood lift, start with gratitude. If a blank page terrifies you, start with a single prompt. Keep the notebook somewhere you will see it, aim for a few minutes rather than a grand session, and let the habit prove its worth before you refine it. Journaling rewards consistency far more than ambition, and even a scruffy, half-finished practice can bring real clarity. For more gentle rituals, explore our mindful practices section and the wider wellness hub at Sixated.