Journal Your Way to Inner Peace: Here's How

A young woman writes in her journal

If you’re new to journaling, it can feel daunting staring at a blank page, unsure what to write or how to begin the first sentence. It's a common feeling, but don't let it stop you from trying this powerful practice. Journaling has been studied extensively and has been shown to have a range of benefits for our mental health. Here are 10 reasons why you should try this self-care practice to find inner peace:


It will give your mental health a boost

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Journaling is a therapeutic outlet that’s often used to manage mental health issues like depression and anxiety. When you write about your thoughts and emotions, you externalize them and it allows you to gain perspective and clarity. This process can help you identify negative thought patterns and triggers, empowering you to challenge and reframe them. Moreover, journaling provides a safe space to express yourself freely, without fear of judgment from anyone. Dumping your feelings and thoughts on a page can be very cathartic, and it’s better than the alternative of letting them spiral out of control.

It can boost your immune function

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The connection between journaling and immune function may take you by surprise, but research supports it. Chronic stress is known to weaken the immune system, making you more susceptible to illness. By reducing stress levels, journaling indirectly enhances immune function. When you write about your feelings and experiences, you’re letting go of all those bottled-up emotions and the tension that goes with them. It’s an effective form of stress relief and it also encourages mindfulness, which has also been linked to a stronger immune response.

It helps you cultivate gratitude

Journal with the phrase on the cover: "Today I am Grateful"

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Gratitude journaling is all about reflecting on the things you’re thankful for in life, which often go over everyone’s heads because we’re distracted by everything going on around us. By focusing on the positive aspects of your life, you will be able to shift your perspective from scarcity to abundance, which may help you feel more content. Gratitude journaling also promotes self-awareness by encouraging you to pay attention to the present moment and appreciate the little things. Over time, this practice can rewire your brain for positivity, helping you adopt a more optimistic outlook that will serve you much better than a negative one.

It can help you process trauma

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Journaling can be a powerful tool for processing and healing from traumatic events. When you write about your experiences, thoughts, and feelings, it helps you make sense of what happened and how it affected you. This is a process that allows you to externalize and organize your thoughts, making them more manageable and less overwhelming. Through regular journaling, you can gain insight into your trauma, identify coping strategies, and ultimately, facilitate healing and recovery.

It can help you enhance your memory function

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Studies have shown that writing things down makes them easier to remember. That’s because writing engages cognitive processes that can enhance memory function. Journaling requires active engagement with the information, so it’s a great way to commit things to your long-term memory, making them easier to remember later on. Moreover, journaling promotes introspection, which can help strengthen the connections between different memories. Over time, journaling can make your memory sharper, which will help you remember not just experiences for longer, but also details and information.

It can help you develop your emotional intelligence

overhead perspective of a woman's hands writing in her journal

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Emotional intelligence is the ability to recognize, understand, and manage your own emotions, as well as the emotions of others. This is an essential life skill we’re not taught in school, and it helps us develop our own well-being and also have healthier interpersonal skills. Journaling can help you develop emotional intelligence by promoting self-awareness, self-reflection, and empathy. When you write about your thoughts and feelings, you become more attuned to your emotional state, allowing you to identify and regulate your emotions more effectively. This, in turn, will help you develop insight into the thoughts and feelings of other people. It will make social interactions easier to navigate and help you build stronger relationships.

It will help you achieve your goals

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Another great thing about journaling is that it can help you set and achieve your goals. The most important part of goal-setting is making sure your intentions are clear and drawing a plan of action for what needs to be done. Achieving our goals is a process that requires several steps and using journaling to regularly reflect on your progress, celebrate your successes, and identify areas for improvement will help you stay on track. It’s a marathon, not a sprint, so whether you have personal, professional, or academic goals, journaling can help you achieve them.

It’s a great way to practice self-discipline and accountability

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Consistent journaling requires discipline and commitment, which can translate into other areas of your life. When you set aside time each day to write in your journal, you’re establishing a routine that reinforces self-discipline. Journaling isn’t something you have to do because someone else gave you the task. You’re doing it for yourself because you know it can help you feel better, think better, and strengthen your mind. It’s one of those habits that encourage accountability and encourage more personal growth than you realize.

It can help you develop your sense of self-confidence

a woman writes in her journal while smiling

For women, celebrating and loudly acknowledging our successes is often discouraged. We’re taught to believe that when women do it, it’s boastful and when men do it, it’s confident. Well, it can be difficult to unlearn that and embrace your self-confidence, but journaling is a powerful tool. In your journal, you can be as boastful as you want about your accomplishments and become more confident in expressing your admiration for yourself. It also allows you to reflect on your setbacks, identifying the things you’ve learned in the process and how much further you still have to go. By regularly doing this, you will cultivate a sense of pride that will be easier to express in other ways, build your overall confidence, and become more sure of your self-worth.

It can make you more creative

a woman adds photographs to her personal journal

Last but not least, journaling encourages creativity by providing a space for exploration, experimentation, and expression without any limits. If you decide to engage in stream-of-consciousness writing or journaling prompts, you will be able to tap into your subconscious mind and unlock new perspectives. Journaling can also encourage you to be more expressive, build your vocabulary, nurture ideas, connect with yourself, and explore your inner world a lot more in-depth.

Discovering the healing power of journaling can be a transformative journey. Whether you’re going through any kind of hardship or you just want to focus more on your well-being, adopting this practice will add many great benefits to your life.

This Viral Video Game Is Changing the Face of Voter Outreach

In 2024, voting campaigns have evolved greatly, to say the least. Creativity is now the name of the game and tongue-in-cheek humor is expertly leveraged to drive action. One example of that is Bop the Bigot, a revival of a viral game created in 2016 by Bazta Arpaio, an Arizona activist group, as part of a campaign to unseat Maricopa County’s Sheriff Joe Arpaio. Arpaio lost his re-election to Paul Penzone that year.

The game has now been updated for the current election cycle and relaunched by On Point Studios, with new features added to enable players to find out what’s on their ballot, confirm voter status, and register to vote.

Much like its former 2016 version, the game allows users to take out their political frustrations by virtually “bopping” GOP candidates in the head. It’s very similar to whack-a-mole, except the mole is replaced by former President Donald Trump, Ohio’s Senator J. D. Vance, and Kevin Roberts, President of the Heritage Foundation, which is spearheading Project 2025.

cartoon renditions of Donald Trump and J.D. Vance around a Bop the Bigot logoPromotional image provided by On Point Studios.

B. Loewe, Director of On Point Studios, came up with the concept for this game when working as the Communications Director at Bazta Arpaio in 2016, and is the executive producer of this revamped version. In the first version of the game, Bop the Bigot players used a chancla (flip flop) to “bop” the characters, tapping into Latino culture by leaning on the childhood experience of being set right by a flying chancla from a fed-up mother or grandmother.

This year, the chancla is replaced by a more current element, a green coconut, referencing Kamala Harris’ coconut tree meme. There are also side characters like “the couch,” cat ladies, and more coconuts. All references to jokes about Vice-Presidential candidate Vance, or insults Vance has made about women on the campaign trail.

Another new addition is that Harris’ laugh is immortalized as the game-over sound effect, an unexpected detail that adds even more humor and levity to the game.

cartoon renditions of Donald Trump, Kevin Roberts, and J.D. Vance around a Bop the Bigot logoPromotional image provided by On Point Studios.

Bop the Bigot, which is playable on desktop and mobile, is intended not just as a way to vent political frustrations, but also as a tool for activism and securing voter engagement.

For example, the game supports the work of Mexican Neidi Dominguez Zamorano, Founding Executive Director of the non-profit organization Organized Power in Numbers by using the “game over” screen to prompt players to donate to it and support their efforts.

Organized Power in Numbers is focused on empowering workers in the South and Southwest of the U.S. through collective action and comprehensive campaigns. Their mission is to create a large-scale movement that challenges the status quo and advocates for workers' rights, and racial and economic justice.

Currently, Dominguez Zamorano is leading worker outreach to 2 million working-class voters in the South and Southwest through doorknocking, texting, and calls with the help of local groups in North Carolina, Arizona, New Mexico, and more.

“We have been blown away by the enthusiastic reception for the video game. We knew we wanted to be part of its creative approach because our movement needs more fun and laughter. We need more ways to connect with nuestra gente so we can feel joy among all the absurdity we witness every day,” Dominguez Zamorano shared with Luz Media via email.

“Our people are gente trabajadora and we deserve to feel uplifted even in our toughest moments. We are deeply involved in the South and Southwest so we know what’s at stake in this election and we’re happy this can be a resource to mobilize, raise spirits, and get out the vote," she concluded.

Dominguez Zamorano is a committed activist for immigrants and workers' rights, known for her strategist skills and expertise. She played a key role in the campaign to win DACA and has also held roles in major campaigns, including as Deputy National States Director for Bernie Sanders' 2020 presidential campaign. In addition to her work with Organized Power in Numbers, Dominguez Zamorano is serving as a Senior Advisor to Mijente’s Fuera Trump Initiative.

Grassroots efforts like these have taken on new life in 2024, with Bop the Bigot adding to the larger, ongoing fight against political apathy and disinformation. Just as it did during the 2016 race, the video game uses humor to soften the serious task at hand—getting people to the polls.

"We want the game to be a fun and comical outlet for anyone who’s been insulted, frustrated, or harmed by Trump in the past and everyone who is ready to move forward as a country after election day," explained Loewe in a press release. "The proposals in Project 2025 and the beliefs of Trump and Vance aren’t just weird, they’re truly harmful. We wanted to give people a humorous and peaceful way to smack down their racism and sexism. We hope it makes people laugh and also feel empowered and motivated to get to the polls on or before election day."

With a mix of satire, sharp political critique, and nostalgia, the game is a call to action. The upcoming election, which is getting closer by the minute, has sparked fierce activism and creative yet grounded initiatives like these aim to ensure voters are engaged, especially young Latinos and disenfranchised groups.

hands holding up yellow protest signs that say Hands Off Our Bodies
Photo Credit: Gayatri Malhotra via Unsplash

Originally published in Common Dreams. Reprinted with permission.

The Latino electorate will prove decisive in securing reproductive freedom and abortion access through ballot measures around the country, particularly in states where Latinos are a significant portion of the electorate.

In November, abortion rights measures will appear on ballots across ten states, including Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Nevada, and New York, where Latinos make up a significant portion of the electorate. For decades, pundits and politicians have recycled long-held misconceptions about Latino voters and abortion access, citing our conservative and religious beliefs.

Anti-abortion extremists have long fueled these misconceptions through misinformation and disinformation campaigns targeting Latino communities with egregious lies and inflammatory rhetoric about abortion. Yet, polling, focus groups, and direct interactions with Latino communities have debunked these outdated tropes.

The Latino electorate will prove decisive in securing reproductive freedom and abortion access through ballot measures around the country, particularly in states where Latinos are a significant portion of the electorate.

For Latinos, the freedom to decide, a pillar of our American democracy, is critical. Meanwhile, Latinos are being hit directly with anti-abortion efforts that take away that freedom such as the six-week abortion ban put into effect by the Florida Supreme Court and the 1864 abortion ban upheld by the Arizona Supreme Court. In the wake of the Dobbs decision, people of color and Latinas have felt the impact of a lack of abortion access, an element of basic healthcare.

A 2023 report by the National Partnership for Women and Families estimated that nearly 6.5 million Latinas, or 42% of all Latinas of reproductive age in the country, live in a state that either had or was likely to ban abortion. Ironically, it will be abortion access and anti-choice efforts to restrict freedom of choice that will mobilize Latino voters this election.

In a poll conducted by three national reproductive justice organizations, 87% of Latinas named abortion and women’s rights as one of their top priorities as they head to the polls. Another battleground poll conducted by Somos PAC and BSP Research found that 61% of Latino registered voters expressed a more positive/favorable view of Kamala Harris after hearing that she will protect abortion rights, versus only 19% of Latinos who said they had a more negative view of Harris after hearing that.

In key states to secure the White House and both chambers, Latinos make up large chunks of the electorate: Arizona (25%), Colorado (15%), Florida (20%), Nevada (20%), and New York (12%). In the face of unprecedented attacks on basic healthcare access and targeted attempts by extremists to mislead and divide our community on this issue, this November Latinos will be key deciders on abortion access across the country.

Mari Urbina, Managing Director of Indivisible, Battleground Arizona Lead and former Harry Reid advisor.

Héctor Sánchez Barba is president and CEO of Mi Familia Vota (MFV).