Almost everyone quits journaling in the same two places: the blank page, and the first missed day. Here's how to keep the habit by removing both — lower the bar to one honest line, drop the streak entirely, and let the entry write itself.
It's rarely a discipline problem. Two things kill most journaling habits: the blank page (you sit down, nothing comes, you close the app) and the broken streak (you miss a day, the guilt piles up, and quitting feels easier than facing it). Fix those two and the habit mostly takes care of itself.
The goal on any given night isn't a page — it's a sentence. "Today was a lot." "I felt behind all day." "Good talk with Mom." One honest line is a complete entry. If the bar is low enough that you can clear it while tired, you'll clear it most nights, and most nights is the whole game.
Streaks feel motivating until the day you break one — then they punish you for being human. A habit you keep for years has to survive missed days, hard weeks, and life. Give yourself explicit permission to miss without penalty. Consistency over months beats a perfect week you eventually abandon.
Anchor it to something you already do — brushing your teeth, getting into bed — and keep it short. Two minutes, then stop. The point is to return tomorrow, not to write the definitive account of your day.
For a lot of people, typing is the friction. Saying a few lines out loud — the way you'd tell a friend on the walk home — is far easier and just as real. If the keyboard is what stops you, speak instead.
The gentlest version of all of this is not to face the blank page at all. That's the whole reason Ori exists: you say or type a few lines, and each evening it writes the entry back to you as a short, honest letter — drawn only from your own words. No streaks, no scores, no guilt for a missed day. It's free, and it never leaves your phone.
One honest line — or a few words out loud — and Ori writes the rest, each evening. No streaks, no guilt. Free, and it never leaves your phone.
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