The Benefits of Journaling for RecoveryTable of ContentsThe Benefits of Journaling for RecoveryLetting Loose of Toxic MemoriesHow it Can Benefit Physical HealthHow it Can Benefit Brain FunctioningHow to Get it GoingFreedom From Addiction is Possible, Here! I don’t know about you, but in my early recovery, it sometimes felt like I had an entirely separate […]
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I don’t know about you, but in my early recovery, it sometimes felt like I had an entirely separate person living inside my head. They would fill my thoughts with horrible images from my past, or notions that I would never be able to stay sober, or that no one wanted me around. Pretty dark stuff, and it could be hard to differentiate, before going through the 12 steps, that it was actually just my addiction talking to me.
My therapist in treatment recommended I try journaling. I’m not sure why, but for some reason, I felt some sort of stigma against it, like writing in a diary with a little lock on it was something that only those characters in the Babysitters Club books would do. But I decided to try it. Why not?
The journaling process started out with me more describing every activity of my day and yelling at whatever God was out there listening and then turned into some weird doodling for a while until finally, I was able to piece together some thoughts that were spiraling around my brain, and actually put them on paper.
It was almost like I had opened a floodgate. Memories and emotions from my childhood were poured onto the pages, and embarrassing things that I said to my friends when I was drunk, and the shame I was still harboring from dark times during my using, I started to fill the spiral notebook I was given on my first day in treatment.
Shortly after, my journaling began to develop into more of a creative expression of my emotions, a logbook of my thoughts and desires and grew into sort of becoming my most trusted advisor – someone I could tell everything to. My journaling was never judgemental, it didn’t make me feel bad for those petty thoughts that I had, or that I still felt upset about the guy that cut me off on the highway.
I have no idea why, but it actually felt better after I finished writing. Like the thought I wrote about had been temporarily plucked from the endless row of torment that crashed around my brain while I lay in bed trying to sleep at night. It was a form of catharsis for me in treatment.
As I got a little soberer and went back to the real world, I managed to lose my habit of journaling. It’s funny how sometimes in recovery, we can forget to do the easiest stuff that works the best for us. Thankfully, after a while of not writing, I started to feel the pain get great enough, and I picked the pen up again while I sipped my morning coffee.
It still works for me. Some days I feel stiff when I write, and sometimes it’s like a waterfall of resentments or gratitude from the day before. Whatever I write, it’s cool to be able to kind of go back and see the progressions and fallbacks that I experience. It’s like my own Game of Thrones, where I can go back to any episode and watch a part that relates to something important that is happening now and realize the huge connection that I failed to see before.
A lot of people out there may relate to that stigma of journaling, or hate the idea of writing after they have been subjected to the topics we were given throughout school. However, there is actually a lot of data out there, and a whole bunch of studies that have been done that suggest that journaling every day can actually be BENEFICIAL TO YOUR PHYSICAL HEALTH!
This study compared people who have experienced trauma, with one group writing about superficial topics such as their room or their shoes, while the other group wrote about past the most traumatic or upsetting experience of their life. The control group, the superficial writing topic, did show some improvements in their moods, but the experimental group, that wrote about the traumatic event, showed dramatically increased improvements in many different areas of their lives.
These studies and others have shown that journaling allows both your left and right brain to be activated. The actual physical act of writing activates your left brain, which is analytical and rational. While all that is happening on the left side, the right side, the master of the creative side of you, is opened up for free-thinking and non-judgmental expression from the left side.
It can be a little weird in the beginning, or it might feel stiff if you are a perfectionist like I am, but researchers indicate that there are some helpful guidelines to journaling that will help improve creativity and help you feel more comfortable with the whole idea of it.
If you or a loved one is suffering from alcoholism or addiction, understand that you are not alone in your struggles! If you are ready to change your life and finally be free of your addiction, then Rehabs Of Armerica can help. We can give you the jump-start you need in order to experience the recovery you have always wanted.
Edward lives and works in South Florida and has been a part of its recovery community for many years. With a B.A. in English Literature from the University of Massachusetts, he works to help Find Addiction Rehabs as both a writer and marketer. Edward loves to share his passion for the field through writing about addiction topics, effective treatment for addiction, and behavioral health as a whole. Alongside personal experience, Edward has deep connections to the mental health treatment industry, having worked as a medical office manager for a psychiatric consortium for many years.
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