BY 1808Delaware
Workshop Snapshot
- When: Saturday, July 26, 2025, 1:00 PM – 3:00 PM
- Where: Liberty Branch Library, Community Rooms A & B, 7468 Steitz Road, Powell Delaware County District Library
- Cost: Free (registration required)
- Bring: Your favorite blank journal and an open mind
What Is Intentional Journaling?
Unlike a casual diary entry, intentional journaling begins with a purpose—maybe easing stress, mapping out goals, or untangling complicated feelings. You set a single focus, grab a pen, and let the page guide self‑discovery. Prompts such as “What thoughts do I want to let go today?” or “How do I want this week to feel?” turn blank paper into a personal compass.
Why the Library Is Hosting It
Programs team member Amanda Harrelson says the branch has noticed a “surge of interest in mindful creativity.” The light‑filled Community Rooms, overlooking prairie plantings, offer a calm backdrop that “encourages reflection the moment you sit down,” she adds.
Inside the Two‑Hour Session
- Setting Your Intention (1:05 PM). A short meditation helps participants choose a theme—gratitude, future planning, emotional clarity, you name it.
- Prompt Sprint (1:20 PM). Facilitators provide a menu of prompts. You’ll pick two and write in timed bursts.
- Reflection Break (2:00 PM). Share observations—or keep them private—and learn how to spot patterns when you reread later.
- Building a Habit (2:30 PM). Tips for carving out ten focused minutes a day, plus a handout listing local cafés and parks perfect for writing.
The Payoff
Regular intentional journaling can sharpen self‑awareness, align daily actions with personal values, and create a low‑pressure space to unload stress—benefits mental‑health professionals increasingly endorse.
How to Claim Your Seat
Registration is open now through the Delaware County District Library event portal. A single click secures your spot: tinyurl.com/IntentionalJournalDCDL delawarelibrary.libnet.info
If your summer reading goal involves more than finishing novels, this afternoon of mindful page‑turning may be just the spark your pen—and your perspective—need.