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Paperback Way of the Journal: A Journal Therapy Workbook for Healing Book

ISBN: 0962916420

ISBN13: 9780962916427

Way of the Journal: A Journal Therapy Workbook for Healing

In The Way of the Journal, therapist and author Kathleen Adams, M.A. teaches her trademark approach to using reflective writing as a therapeutic process. Adams' ten-step "quick and easy" method was... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Great Stratgies For Journaling-So Helpful

I found this book to be so helpful. I am new to Journaling so I get stuck alot. Now I have a lot of different ways to go. I even copied some of the material for later use....

This is the one THEY don't want you to know about.

You know whom I mean--all those people jumping on the 'journaling' bandwagon. This book is the original and best. Others will pick or choose some of her techniques and exercises (and mmmaaaaaaybe give her credit) but throw in a little Oprah-ism and bam! pull the wool over the eyes of the new journaler. For example, Meyn's shamelessly mercenary _lessons in therapeutic writing_ steals several ideas from this book, and doesn't even bother to change the names--Alphapoems? Come on, my college students try harder when they're plagiarizing.... The reason the new trendies are getting away with it is this (well, two reasons, actually): we always think New means Better ('new and improved!' anyone remember New Coke?). Second, writing works. Seriously. There's almost no way you could commit to writing a journal and not get SOME benefit out of it. If you just sat and freewrote for 20 minutes a day (which Julia Cameron recommends) you'd get major benefits. If you just wrote a portrait or a memory or a dream, you'd benefit. There's NO WAY writing in a journal canNOT improve the quality of your life. Thus even when we read New Age so-and-so's latest retread of the same old stuff, we think so-and-so's a bloody genius, because, well, we wrote and felt better! So, we really don't *need* new technigues, anything will do. However, we do LIKE new techniques, right? We like things that shake up our dull routine, that scrape up the bottom of the pond a bit. That get us thinking and looking at our lives in new ways. And this book is THE best, pound for pound, dollar for dollar, for that. She sets it as a course (and I did it as a course and highly recommend it, and I've been journaling for decades!) and after each day's activity, you get a chance to reflect on how that particular experience worked for you. So at the end of the 'course' you not only have concrete tools to use, you have experience with using them, so you can pick and choose which technique you *feel* like doing that day. I made myself a little deck of index cards and wrote one technique per card, so that when I need a boost or something different, I draw a card and go! If you only get one book on journaling, get this one. It's the original, the best, the easiest to use, and the most useful. Even if you have other journaling books, get this one too, because it's that good, and it's wonderful to have ALL the good ideas in one place!

THE "starter" book for anyone new to journaling-as-therapy

This is the book that got me started 5 1/2 years ago. I had been looking for a way to use my attraction to writing as a "way in" to my ongoing emotional process. This is the book that literally fell off the shelf into my lap. Filled with exercises that can be done over a two-week period, I blitzed through them all in two days. I was on my way and haven't stopped since. Writing has become my primary tool for self-help, comfort, inspiration, and connection.The exercises in Way of the Journal are designed to help the reader (and journaler) identify which forms are of most direct benefit. Some people respond best to Alphapoems, others to the Five-Minute Sprint. Each structure is presented with the opportunity to experience it as well as to evaluate its effectiveness for the reader/writer. By the end, you have a clear understanding of what is and is not helpful to you, the individual.In Way of the Journal, Adams taught me about containment. In process writing, I had been afraid of the intensity of my own emotions, afraid the writing would go too deep, leave me undone. Way of the Journal taught me to "dive deep and surface," to come up for air at regular intervals. And also to frame the emotional content of my writing within a structure that felt safer than free writing.If you are just starting, this is the one to buy. If you need some exercises to "jump start" your writing, this is a great toolbox. If you want a list of outstanding references, check out the Bibliography.Practical, well-researched, easy to use, an excellent reference for writers at any stage of development is their use of writing-as-process.

Hard work made rewarding.

This workbook offers extensive exercises into the depths of journaling as healing therapy. As the life blood of The Center for Journal Therapy and a national expert as well as trainer in journal work, the author has "been there" and you know it after working with this book. Necessary work whether you are the healer or the healee.

Especially helpful for people who get restimulated

This book is especially helpful for people who are recovering from abuse and have a tendency to get restimulated when doing open-ended writing. The author focuses on teaching techniques that can be used to help provide safety and structure to make the process of journaling a healing rather than retraumatizing one. I'm finding it quite valuable and feel grateful to have discovered it.
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