Author Archives: Nathan Ohren

LifeJournal Online

JT_Ruth_Folit

My guest expert this episode is Ruth Folit, the founder and director of the International Association of Journal Writers.  (Did you know there was such a thing?!  Yea, go check it out!)  But Ruth will have to come back sometime to tell us more about this amazing library of journaling resources, and the wise council of journal-writing elders . . . because in this episode, there’s too much to discuss about the newest version of her revolutionary software LifeJournal Online.

Ten years in the making, LifeJournal has all the features most cherished by typists as well as hand-writers!  Ruth recalls the moment she first decided to share journaling with the world. (Now over 30,000 people and counting!)  Plus of course, we discuss some insightful topics, and a powerful journaling exercise, along the way.   (JournalTalk, Episode #13, August 19, 2013)

Credits:
Music: Paul Mottram, ”Shellfish Behaviour” (AudioNetwork.com)
Voiceover: Tami Egbert and Kym Maher
Logo Art: Wendy Kipfmiller, Snixysnix.com

To Subscribe:
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To Listen:
Click on the “play” button > at the top of this page.

Ten Journaling Prompts for Self Love

Guest post by Carrie Leigh Sandoval

Journaling is an act of self love. Each time you choose to explore your inner reality, you are sending a powerful signal to your subconscious mind – “I am worth knowing.”  Many of us grew up believing it was our job to please others, to be selfless and not speak up about our opinions. This is one of the reasons I began journaling in the first place. It was the one place I could just be and feel at peace. What led you to journaling? Think about it for a moment. Then feel why it is so valuable to you.

The reason many of us start a new habit and don’t follow through with it is because we don’t feel worthy. We may say we don’t have time or energy, but the truth is, underneath all that is actually “I’m not worth the time and/or energy.”

But you are. I am too. And when we cultivate love for ourselves we give others permission to do so too. That’s how we change the world!

If you notice you’re breaking a commitment to yourself, recognize it, acknowledge it, forgive yourself and decide to do something different. You could spend the time you would have spent beating yourself up doing something more productive — like journaling! 🙂

Speaking of journaling, here are 10 prompts to fill yourself up with love:

  1. The top ten things that bring me peace are:
  2. When I am at peace with myself I feel . . .
  3. Ten ways I already show love for myself are:
  4. Ten new ideas to show myself I am worthy and deserving of love . . . (then, commit to doing at least one of these things today)
  5. I acknowledge my successes. Here are 20 things I’ve accomplished that made me feel awesome:
  6. Oops, I made a mistake. I forgive myself for:
  7. Here’s how I know I’m on the right track:
  8. Here are all the reasons I deserve love:
  9. I’m so great because…
  10. When I am feeling confident, this is how my world looks and flows:

By choosing to write on a regular basis, you are literally retraining your consciousness. Sometimes our brains resist change, but know it’s just something that happens naturally. Yet, each time you choose something different you are reprogramming your mind for success and abundance because you’re telling it – “I am worthy of love.”

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CarrieSandovalCarrie is a loving momma, journaling expert, law of attraction coach and author of “Journals Have Feelings Too: A Guidebook for Writing Your Way Back to Sanity.” Her healing journey began at the age of 14 when she had nowhere else to turn, but her journal. The discoveries she made about herself during this trying time later became the fuel for her passion. She is now guiding young women and their parents to transform their beliefs about themselves and the world so that they can live confidently and joyfully.

Connect with Carrie at her website for awesome blog posts and journaling prompts + sign up for a free chapter from her book!

Turning Journals into Memoirs

Joan Leof

Thanks to Joan Leof, my guest expert in this week’s episode, I’ll need to update my website.  In preparation for our interview, Joan did some research about me; she figured out that I had given up on writing a book based on content from my years of journal-writing.  And in our subsequent conversation, she asked me some questions that stirred my thinking about this.  Being the amazing journal-to-memoir coach that she is, by the time we were finished talking, I was reminded of my belief that my story is a valuable one, and re-inspired to pick up my old writings to breathe new life into them!  Since then, I’ve been writing 100-Word Flash Memoirs as often as I can, collecting the pieces to assemble for a unique story about my spiritual odyssey and coming-of-age.

Joan Leof has been coaching journalers, creative writers, and spiritual autobiographers for over 30 years.  Her website displays her own accomplishment of her personal story made into a bookFatal If Swallowedas well as other journaling resources and workshops that she teaches in the Delaware area.

Our conversation was stimulating and fascinating.  Joan gives a clear goal for memoirists to stay focused on, to make sure the journey from journaling to published author stays satisfying.  In addition, Joan shares some excellent tips for people who want to join (or begin their own) journaling groups to deepen their practice!  I look forward to hearing your feedback.  Please post a comment below, telling what you enjoyed most!  (JournalTalk, Episode #12, August 5, 2013)

Credits:
Music: Paul Mottram, ”Shellfish Behaviour” (AudioNetwork.com)
Voiceover: Tami Egbert and Kym Maher
Logo Art: Wendy Kipfmiller, Snixysnix.com

To Subscribe:
Apple/iPhone/iTunes: Click here.
Google/Feedburner: Click here.
Blubrry site: Click here.

To Listen:
Click on the “play” button > at the top of this post.

Journaling Your Way to Personal Growth

Link:  Journaling Your Way to Personal Growth, by Marquita Herald

Journaling for Personal Growth

Marquita Herald shares several benefits and great journaling prompts in this article (link above).  Sometimes I find another journaling expert can say something more eloquently than I’ve been saying it for years:

Writing about what is happening in your life will help to clarify your thoughts so you can better understand what you’re feeling and why. When you write, your mind will naturally slow down as you search for the right words to express your feelings, and in the process you become more aware of your thoughts. When you read and summarize what you’ve written, it provides you with the opportunity to step back and look at things in new ways, maybe even from an entirely different perspective.

Here are the Benefits of Journaling she lists:

  • Builds self awareness
  • Reduces stress and helps to work through problems
  • Helps you to stay focused on your priorities and make better choices
  • Brings out your natural creativity and wisdom
  • Helps you identify your values
  • Clarifies thoughts, feelings and behavior
  • Reveals your greater potential
  • Beneficial for healing emotionally, mentally and spiritually
  • Helps you see yourself as an individual
  • Connects you to the bigger picture of your life

I think you will enjoy this article!  You are most welcome to post a reply or share this with a friend.

~Nathan

Lynda Monk on JournalTalk

Journaling in Groups

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It’s one thing to achieve personal transformation through the act and habit of journaling.  But there’s a new trend emerging among journal-writers: taking that transformation to the level of community.  My guest this episode is Lynda Monk, who has been journaling with her friends for several years, and ready to launch a book on the experience, Writing Alone Together:  Women Journaling for Creativity, Compassion and Community.

Lynda has been a Social Worker in Canada, for over 20 years, including 10 years of crisis intervention and counseling work.  In 2000, she founded Creative Wellness — a coaching and training business specializing in supporting the stress and burnout prevention needs of helping and healthcare professionals.  In 2009, Lynda became a Certified Co-Active Life Coach, and turned her passion for the transformational and healing power of therapeutic journaling into the heart of her business.  She offers “Writing for Wellness” workshops, presentations and coaching programs to  helpers, healers, caregivers and conscious-living enthusiasts.

Her company provides access to a wealth of resources for both the individual as well as organizations that seek enlivened practice and healthy living.   Her “Writing for Wellness: Getting Started Guide” (available for free on her website) is an impressive introduction to the art of therapeutic journaling, and is just one of the free resources she offers.

As you listen to my interview with Lynda, we’ll explore a powerful dynamic of journaling within the context of community.  Lynda touches on the power of storytelling, and encourages us to consider beginning our own journaling circle, for many of the same reasons a book enthusiast would join a book club.  I also appreciated the way Lynda so beautifully acknowledged how this podcast series itself is a project of community-building amongst journaling advocates.  (JournalTalk, Episode #11, July 22, 2013)

Credits:
Music: Alexander L’Estrange / Joanna Forbes ”Ooh Yeah” AudioNetwork.com
Voiceover: Tami Egbert and Kym Maher
Logo Art: Wendy Kipfmiller, Snixysnix.com

To Subscribe:
Apple/iPhone/iTunes: Click here.
Google/Feedburner: Click here.

To Listen:
Click on the “play” button > below.

Transform Your Health: Write To Heal (by John Evans)

Transform Your Health: Write To Heal – Duke Integrative Medicine

Join John Evans, MAT, MA, EdD for a transformative 6-week workshop using his landmark approach to healing. Discover opportunities for renewed health by accessing your inner healing voice.

Do you know that writing can help you to heal?

Research tells us that expressive writing has the power to help us transform our physical, mental, and spiritual health. In fact expressive writing has been proven to:

  • Decrease the heart rate
  • Lower blood pressure
  • Enhance breathing
  • Strengthen the immune system so that it can better fight off infection
  • Improve self-esteem
  • Help manage stress

Writing can help us face our most difficult challenges with past or present experiences and even future challenges.  Put another way, when we write we can gain perspective on our circumstances, we provide provident information to our body, and we engage our internal healing resources.

During this 6-week workshop, John Evans will coach participants through a simple progression of exercises he has developed from his more than 25 years of working in the field.  Participation requires neither any prior writing experience nor any aspiration to become a writer.  In fact, the practices simply cultivate your natural and easy ability to express the ideas that define who you are and how you experience your life.

More information about this six-week workshop can be found here.

Why Journaling Changed My Life – by Sam Forintos

Why Journaling Changed My Life

Sam Forintos is another example of someone who began journaling because it was assigned to her by her parents . . . and hated it!  But only a few years later, realized what a magnificent, powerful, and healing tool it was for her, and has been “journaling by choice” ever since.

In this article, Sam gives five journaling “rules” (feel free to adapt or drop any that don’t work for you) that she has found most helpful in keeping her journaling inspiring and beneficial.

1. Only write when you want to.
2. Be honest.
3. NEVER, EVER write bad things about yourself or other people.
4. Don’t write anything you’ll regret/be embarrassed about later.
5. Have fun with it.
Great stuff!  Thanks, Sam.

Morning Pages: The Habit of Journaling

Guest Post by Mari L. McCarthy

Mari is the first person I teamed up with when I “came public” about my desire to help people develop journal-writing skills in a meaningful way.  She has become a good friend and mentor, and I’m pleased to share with you a guest post from her describing what she’s been up to lately.  I have taken this course, and fully endorse it. Mari’s brilliant style of journal coaching is top-notch.

The Habit of Journaling

cover-ebookHow good are you at starting something new? Is it easy to begin a diet, an exercise regimen, a meditation routine? For most of us, starting any kind of new practice that promises to improve our health and happiness is extremely challenging. We want to improve, but we’re reluctant to change.

You decide, for example, that you’ll no longer waste your evenings in front of the television. You’re going to start reading books instead. You spend one or two quiet nights with a great book; but then you remember that your favorite show is on and decide to catch it one more time.

The next evening there’s a special you want to see and the next you waste on mindless sitcoms because you’re mad at your boyfriend and before you know it, you haven’t made a change at all.

It’s one thing to do an activity now and then and it’s something totally different to make it a part of your everyday life. Often we carefully follow a new routine for several days, only to blow it and go back to square one. Unless we make the new habit as common as getting dressed in the morning, as every day as eating lunch, we are not likely to reap the full benefits.

At CreateWriteNow, we are dedicated to the everyday practice of journal writing, as a lifestyle that fosters personal improvement on nearly every level. While we discuss and use many different kinds of journaling, the Morning Pages, originally introduced by Julia Cameron in The Artist’s Way, is one of the easiest ways to get started with a solid journal writing habit.

It’s easy, but it’s still challenging because you do have to take the initiative and begin. So we’ve developed a new course from CreateWriteNow called 12 Days of Morning Pages. You can access the course via email or in ebook format. Its tips and exercises are designed to be an easy and fun way to slide into your daily Morning Pages routine. With the help of the materials, you’ll find you have developed a powerfully healthy habit almost without trying!

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MariJJDuoAvatarsmallMari L. McCarthy (also known as the Oprah of Journaling) is The Journaling Therapy Specialist, founder of Create Write Now, the Personal Growth Journaling Place. Mari offers counseling and encouragement to journal writers through her many online journaling resources, as well as private consultations. Mari’s teachings and workbooks center around journaling for self-discovery, self-growth, and self-healing. She has published nearly 20 journaling guides, exploring such topics as money, jobs, health, bereavement, personal organization, and more. Look for her 27 Days of Journaling to Health and Happiness, a course that begins this September 1st.

Journals Have Feelings, Too!

JT_CarrieLeighSandoval

This podcast series is a way to create and share within a community of people who have remarkable stories of growth and healing through journal-writing.  And the more I look for examples, the more incredible and numerous they come!

This week’s guest is Carrie Leigh Sandoval, author of Journals Have Feelings, Too!  In this episode, we discuss her book and the ways that journaling helped her through the dramas and traumas of her adolescence.  It’s no wonder that Carrie’s passion is empowering youth, showing them how to find, release, and heal past wounds, and replace them with new beliefs.  She also offers online coaching for teens and their parents.

Carrie is also a Law of Attraction coach, and after she shared what that means, she took me on a short journey to fulfill an intention of my own creation.  In turn, I used that as an example for another journaling exercise together!  So grab your journals and tune in as Carrie shares The Law of Attraction!  (JournalTalk, Episode #10, July 8, 2013)

Credits:
Music: Alexander L’Estrange / Joanna Forbes ”Ooh Yeah” AudioNetwork.com
Voiceover: Kym Maher
Logo Art: Wendy Kipfmiller, Snixysnix.com

To Subscribe:
Apple/iPhone/iTunes: Click here.
Google/Feedburner: Click here.

To Listen:
Click on the “play” button > below.

Mari McCarthy featured on “Chaos Into Creativity” website

Carrie Leigh Sandoval’s website has a new look and feel.  Her motto “Chaos Into Creativity” is a superb way to describe a powerful benefit of journaling.  Recently, Mari McCarthy made a guest post, to share about the “Twelve Days of Morning Pages” program:

Whether or not you’re a “morning person,” you probably agree that those first few moments after you wake up are a different kind of consciousness. You might feel a little foggy-headed, for instance, half still in dreamland, if you’re the type that operates best in the latter part of the day. If you’re an “A” type of personality, you may feel most sharp in the early morning.

Either way, it’s a special time. Maybe you can find new discoveries in your semi-dreaming awareness; or those of you who wake up raring to go probably benefit from the thoughts and plans that come to you first thing in the morning. So this post is a suggestion to use those early moments for something truly transformative.

Read On…

Episode #9: Kids Can Journal Too!

Kids Can Journal Too!

For the past four months, I’ve been sharing my reasons for creating JournalTalk.  But I also want to share how JournalTalk is creating me!  In this episode, I discuss four profound lessons that I’ve learned since starting this project, along with a whole variety of other stories:

Nathan with Niece and NephewAll this, and more, on Episode #9 of JournalTalk!  (June 24, 2013)

Credits:
Music: Philip Guyler / John Stax “Bliss” AudioNetwork.com
Voiceover: Tami Egbert and Kym Maher
Logo Art: Wendy Kipfmiller, Snixysnix.com

To Subscribe:
Apple/iPhone/iTunes: Click 
here.
Google/Feedburner: Click 
here.

To Listen:
Click on the “play” button > below.

Journal Writing as My Medicine and Muse

A new article, Journal Writing as My Medicine and Muse, by Joan Leof was posted on CreateWriteNow.com.  I think this excerpt expresses what many journal-writers long to hear:

“If you want to start a memoir now, you can do what I did – just go back to the journals that contain the years and the themes you want to deal with. I did not read all the journals. I did not read any books on how to harvest my journals. You may want to.

I relied more on my belief in journaling as a template for making things happen in my life. If I could make things happen in all areas of my life, as documented in my journal, then I could make my memoir happen.”

Look for an interview with Joan Leof in a JournalTalk podcast episode coming soon, “Turning Journals into Memoirs”.

Dream Journaling Course

Updated!  Six-Week e-Course:  “Dream Journaling”

I’m pleased to announce this course is open for registration, and will begin on October 6th for six weeks, with a “graduation” conference call on November 17th. The course is designed to support a daily (or nightly!) journaling practice, with special inquiry into the nature, the meanings, and the ability to tap into your nighttime dreaming life. Weekly conference call sessions are hosted by journaling coach, Nathan Ohren, host of the JournalTalk podcast.

This course is intended for three audiences:  (1) those who do not remember their dreams once awakened, but want to learn how, (2) those who want to understand their dreams for greater self-awareness and personal growth, and (3) those who want to learn how to induce their favorite dreams, and explore lucid dreaming.  Assignments are given during weekly conference calls.  Journaling coach Nathan Ohren teaches techniques for remembering, capturing, and understanding even the strangest of dreams.

Space_Dream

Why does your fourth grade teacher show up in a scene when you are late for work because elephants are walking across the freeway offramp?  If dreams are the messages from our subconscious mind, why not learn how to decipher and interpret them?  And, is it really possible to alter the content of your dreams by teaching yourself to become aware when you are in the middle of a dream?

Course Outline:

Week #1 – How to Remember Dreams
Week #2 – Memory and the Brain
Week #3 – Symbols and Dream Details
Week #4 – Dream Interpretation Workshop
Week #5 – Dreams and Reality Tests
Week #6 – Exploring Lucid Dreaming (an introduction)

Course Materials:

A pen, a notebook, and a “Dream Totem” are the only requirements for this course.  (We’ll discuss the Totem in Week #2.)  If you’re someone who does not usually remember your dreams, you will enjoy the techniques shared! In addition to journaling, you will be encouraged to explore fun homework assignments, tips, “reality tests”, and exercises to enrich the awareness of your dream life.  A calendar of weekly conference calls is made available so you can get personalized training.  A private page on Facebook is also available for those who want a bulletin board or “journaling circle” to communicate with others in the course.

How to Register:

Please visit my webpage for registration!  You won’t want to miss this unique opportunity to explore and discover something new about yourself!

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100 Word “Flash Memoirs”

I used to be overwhelmed by the thought of all the work involved in piecing together the bits of my life into something interesting for the public. Characters. Plot development. Themes and sub-plots. Point of view. Do I flash-back or flash-forward? But when I learned about Flash Memoirs the story started writing itself. 

Each day, I write just one mini-story: a 100-word piece, inspired by a memory or one highlight on my timeline. Flash-Memoirs are to an autobiography what Haiku are to poetry.  Click here for an example!

Dr. Bernard

Journaling vs. Blogging

Dr. Bernard

Joseph Bernard, Ph.D. has been blogging about life-enrichment, spirituality, and self-actualization for the past seven years.  Occasionally, he posts an article about the benefits of journal-writing, and that is how we met.  In this episode, we had fun discussing the similarities and differences between journaling and blogging.

His blog, ExploreLifeBlog.com is filled with insights and fresh perspective that invite a gentle self-examination. Dr. Bernard frequently reminds his readers and clients to challenge their assumptions, and to take a broader view.  His book, Awaken: 100 Questions To Expand Your Mind and Open Your Heart, is the perfect journaling companion.  Each page bears a unique question, inviting us to look deeper into ourselves and become more aware of new possibilities.

Dr. Bernard is also an empathic counselor, and I enjoyed learning about the career choices which led to his current practice.  But my favorite part of this interview was discussing how we recognize the wisdom of that inner, guiding voice when we write in our journals with an open heart.  I could have easily titled this episode “Journaling for Divine Guidance”!  Leave your comment below, and I will send you information about how you can receive a free, private fifteen-minute consultation with Dr. Joseph Bernard personally.  (JournalTalk, Episode #8, June 10, 2013)

Credits:
Music: Philip Guyler / John Stax “Bliss” AudioNetwork.com
Voiceover: Kym Maher
Logo Art: Wendy Kipfmiller, Snixysnix.com

To Subscribe:
Apple/iPhone/iTunes: Click here.
Google/Feedburner: Click here.

To Listen:
Click on the “play” button > below.