Why I Write Morning Pages
I write morning pages. Every morning without fail. Even when I recently had a pressing engagement through in Glasgow that required I leave the house at 5.30 (with 3 fed, washed & dressed children), I was up at 4.15 in the still quiet of the early morning dark, writing my three A4 pages of longhand stream of consciousness. My pen travelled fluidly across the lined paper and I struggled to keep my eyes open.
A part of me is surprised at myself. I didn’t know I had it in me to be so dedicated to a practice. Give me a challenge, set me a target and I will respond with the most vicious resistance. But morning pages seem to have snuck under the radar somehow. I think it’s because I write them before I’m fully awake. As I begin to slide into consciousness, my limbs languid, my body sleepwarm, I lean across the mattress and fumble around for my large A4 refill pad and my black biro. Pulling my humble writing materials back into the bed with me, I rest my head against my left arm and start writing from this horizontal position.
From this perspective it can sometimes be hard to see where the far edge of the paper is, which has led to a couple of ink stains on the sheets. It can also be hard to see exactly what I’m writing, but that’s ok, because being able to read my pages back over is not really important to me. It’s the act of writing them in the first place that produces the magic. That and quite frequently my pages are filled with garbled nonsense. And I certainly won’t be winning any awards for beautiful penmanship.
But this practice, this practice above all others that I have started and stopped, is now a non-negotiable aspect of my day. It’s one of the very few things that I do solely for me, and to start your day by doing something which is only for you and for the blossoming of your creative self, is a very powerful statement to make. In fact, even if you believe yourself not to be interested in nurturing your creativity, morning pages are a simple act of self-love. A missive to your heart, your mind, that you matter, that you are worth spending the time on.
So, why do I write morning pages? What’s been the result of all these mornings of scribbled pages?
Honestly, dear reader, I believe this practice has led me back to myself. I don’t think I even really knew just how lost I was until I found myself again. I remembered things that I had forgotten. Things like my love of words. My desire to write beautifully. The pleasure that I get when I find flow in describing the sacred wonder I see in the everyday.
I found my voice.
I found my desire.
I found my purpose.
All this from 3 A4 pages of scrawled black biro morning after morning? Could that even be possible? Yes. Yes, I think it can, my lovely. And I would love for you to experience it for yourself.
If you do want to give it a go, or have tried it in the past and then dropped it and want to pick it up again, I have some advice for you…
If you are one of those who responds well to challenges, and require a level of accountability, then I strongly recommend you join in with Jamie Ridler’s Morning Pages September Challenge. That special lady holds the most magical spaces where true and deep transformations can occur. It won’t matter that you’re joining in late – the important thing is that you join in now.
If, however, you’re like me and resistance rears its ugly head at even the merest hint of a challenge, then what I suggest you do is take a refill pad of paper and a pen (check it works the night before – running out of ink while writing your pages is the single most annoying thing ever) and place it on the floor beside your bed. Then, upon waking, reach for the pad and pen and start writing. Don’t give yourself time to think about it. You’ll only talk yourself out of doing it in the first place. Just reach for your simple writing tools – no need for that special pen, sharpened HB pencils or expensive journal – and just write. Just write.
Do you write morning pages already? Why do you continue to practice this beautiful habit? And if you don’t already, what would persuade you to start? What do you think they could bring to your life?
7 Comments
Jackie Walker
I do feel the resistance, it’s a ‘what on earth will I write about, what will the focus be, what’s the purpose’ and I think it’s the last one which catches me, and which you’ve now explained – the purpose is to find a flow. I guess I could blether to myself in my pages, and that appeals, a lot! A good blether is my forte!!
Julie
Oh Amy – I joined in with Jamie’s morning pages challenge in May. Then I stopped.
Then I intended to do the September challenge. And I haven’t.
But I like the idea of doing it in bed. In May, I was getting up and doing yoga and meditating and showering and then coming down for tea and morning pages. I’m sure by them, my logical brain had over powered any creative nuance!
I think I’ll have more luck if I do it in bed. Thank you for the delicious invitation x
Emmanuelle
I love Morning Pages – except in May I turned the whole thing ’round and did Evening Pages. I love writing pen & paper style, but my right wrist and shoulder didn’t agree with me doing it early in the morning (helloooo tendinitis).
Now, even though it’s not first-thing-in-the-morning, as soon as I get on a computer I use 750words.com. I am proud to say I haven’t missed a day since September began. Ok we’re only a week in but still.
I love doing these pages. Or 750 words. I might feel stuck when I start, but there’s a good chance I have crazy ideas and a racing mind by the end. Extra clarity? Yes please!
Stephen Smith
I haven’t done my morning pages or any journaling for a long time. Because my life has been all bout the Tavern since May, and all I had on my mind was work. But tomorrow is my last day, I gave notice two weeks ago and I am going back into business for myself!
Morning pages, here I come! So excited because every time I do them regularly and consistently they bring out so much inspiration and creativity.
Thanks for the reminder Amy!
Jenni at Mamahhh.com
Morning pages are so many things – a salve, an outlet, an inlet, therapy, exercise, meditation, and more. I do them, I don’t do them. They feel easier to me than “journaling” which carried the heavy weight of documenting my experiences, requiring reflection, and coming around to some amazing insight. Sometimes my morning pages are lists. Sometimes they are coherent and lovely. However the words are or aren’t flowing, I love permission to write ‘I don’t know I don’t know I don’t know.’ Sometimes, that’s the truest thing I can say!
Pingback:
Annu Tara
OK ~ so rather than rising to the challenge, it’s a case of meeting the challenge before one is conscious enough to rise…hmmmm… I like it! This little Morning Pages virgin will go try… actually, as The Great Yoda says “no try, just do”… 🙂