Tech
How to make Apple Journal part of a mindful daily routine
Apple’s Journal app doesn’t promise to improve mental health, but its approach to reflective writing closely aligns with what decades of psychological research actually supports. Here’s why that matters, and how Apple’s approach differs from most wellness apps.
Journal focuses on people’s thoughts and experiences instead of their bodies, unlike the data-driven health tracking with Apple Watch. The app encourages users to reflect on their emotions and pay closer attention to the everyday moments that shape their lives.
Instead of evaluating users or assigning psychological scores, Apple designed Journal as a private place for writing and memory. People can use it to revisit meaningful moments and build a habit of reflection over time.
Apple’s decision to prioritize writing over interpretation aligns with decades of research showing that expressive writing can produce measurable psychological benefits (Frattaroli, 2006; Reinhold et al., 2018). Journal encourages reflection without trying to explain what users think or how they should feel.
Apple has never described Journal as a treatment for depression, anxiety, or any other mental health condition. Researchers also haven’t conducted clinical trials evaluating Apple’s implementation, so no one can honestly claim the app itself improves mental health.
The strongest evidence comes from research on expressive writing, gratitude interventions, autobiographical memory, habit formation, and emotional self-monitoring (Frattaroli, 2006; Sohal et al., 2022). Many wellness apps make mental health claims that go beyond the available evidence.
Apple has taken a more restrained approach with Journal. The company presents the app as a tool for reflection, which is consistent with what current research supports.
Mindfulness doesn’t always begin with meditation
Meditation has become closely associated with mindfulness for stress management and emotional distress. Mindfulness, however, includes paying closer attention to thoughts, emotions, and everyday experiences.
Reflective writing develops that awareness by encouraging people to revisit experiences and examine their emotional reactions. Journaling asks people to think about experiences they’ve already lived.
A difficult conversation, an afternoon hike, dinner with friends, or an ordinary Tuesday can all become opportunities to pause and consider what happened instead of immediately moving on to the next task.
Reflective journaling also asks different questions than a traditional diary, which usually records the events of the day. The practice focuses on why those events mattered, why someone reacted a certain way, or what can be learned from the experience.
Researchers generally agree that intentional reflective writing provides greater psychological value than simply documenting daily activities. The benefits are usually modest and vary considerably from person to person (Frattaroli, 2006; Reinhold et al., 2018).
Journal’s writing prompts reinforce that approach without making the experience feel like homework. The app’s widget suggests topics such as gratitude, kindness, purpose, and meaningful moments instead of asking users to list everything they did that day. Reflection prompts are one of the app’s primary ways of encouraging that habit.
Writing is still Journal’s most powerful feature
Psychologists have studied expressive writing for decades by asking participants to write privately about emotionally meaningful experiences over multiple sessions.
Individual studies have reached different conclusions. Large reviews have still found a consistent pattern across the research (Frattaroli, 2006; Reinhold et al., 2018).
People who write thoughtfully and repeatedly often report small improvements in psychological well-being compared with people who don’t write at all. The benefits appear consistently enough to support reflective writing as a useful mental wellness practice.
The limits of expressive writing are as important as its potential benefits. Researchers don’t consider expressive writing a treatment for depression or anxiety, and they don’t recommend replacing professional care with journaling alone (Reinhold et al., 2018).
Writing about emotionally difficult experiences can temporarily increase distress before those experiences become easier to process. Research also suggests that structured writing exercises usually produce better results than completely open-ended journaling.
Regular practice appears more helpful than writing only during periods of overwhelming stress (Reinhold et al., 2018; Smyth et al., 2018). Apple doesn’t require users to follow a structured writing program, but Journal encourages several habits that researchers have linked to better outcomes.
Reflection prompts reduce the pressure of facing a blank page, suggested moments highlight experiences with emotional significance, and reminders make it easier to return to the app consistently.
Apple doesn’t tell users what conclusions they should reach. Journal focuses on removing common barriers that make reflective writing harder to maintain.
Consistency may be Journal’s most important design goal. Most people don’t abandon journaling because they dislike writing.
Often, people stop because they don’t know what to write about, they forget to open the app, or the effort required to get started outweighs the habit. Apple addresses each of those problems by making reflection easier to begin rather than trying to make journaling more entertaining.
Journal Suggestions may be Apple’s smartest design decision
Opening a blank page can feel surprisingly intimidating. Even people who enjoy writing often struggle to decide whether an experience is interesting enough to record.
Journal Suggestions solve that problem by shifting the question. Instead of asking users to invent something worth writing about, the app surfaces experiences that have already happened.
Psychologists have long understood that autobiographical memory depends heavily on cues. People rarely retrieve memories in chronological order like scrolling through a timeline (Crane et al., 2007).
A photograph can suddenly bring back details that seemed forgotten. A familiar song can transport someone to a particular afternoon years earlier. Walking past a familiar location often recalls conversations, emotions, and experiences connected to that place.
Apple appears to have designed Journal around that understanding of memory. Journal Suggestions don’t preserve memories more accurately or strengthen memory itself, and the research doesn’t support making claims that broad.
Presenting those moments changes how the journaling experience feels. Journal brings meaningful experiences back to users instead of asking them to search for something to write about.
Apple extends that philosophy throughout the rest of the app. Users can begin an entry on their iPhones, attach photos, voice recordings, and locations without switching between apps, and continue writing later on an iPad or Mac.
None of those features change the psychology behind reflection. Each one removes another small barrier between living an experience and thinking about what that experience meant.
Health adds context without trying to explain everything
Journal becomes even more interesting when viewed alongside Apple’s Health app. Users can choose to log a state of mind while writing and automatically record time spent journaling as mindful minutes.
Health then places those entries alongside sleep, exercise, daylight exposure, and other health information. Apple’s decision to separate those responsibilities between two apps deserves attention.
Journal captures experiences while they’re still fresh. Health organizes information over weeks and months, allowing trends to emerge naturally instead of interrupting the writing process with charts and graphs.
The separation keeps Journal focused on reflection while allowing Health to remain the place where patterns become visible.
Researchers generally consider emotional self-monitoring a useful practice when used thoughtfully. Recording moods over time can reveal recurring stressors and show how daily habits affect emotional well-being (Wright et al., 2025).
Mood records can also make conversations with healthcare providers more productive because people don’t have to rely entirely on memory. Several weeks of entries often reveal patterns that are difficult to recognize one day at a time.
Mood tracking also has limitations, and Apple deserves credit for avoiding some of the most common pitfalls. Research has found that repeatedly monitoring emotions without a clear purpose can make ordinary emotional fluctuations feel more significant than they really are (Wright et al., 2025).
Some wellness apps respond by generating scores, interpretations, or personalized advice that imply a level of certainty the underlying data can’t support. Apple takes a more restrained approach.
State of Mind entries remain optional, and Health presents relationships rather than explanations. Someone may notice that poor sleep often coincides with lower mood or that regular exercise tends to accompany more positive days.
Health doesn’t claim one caused the other, and Journal doesn’t attempt to interpret those observations. Apple gives users information while leaving the conclusions to them.
Privacy encourages honest reflection
Journaling only works when people feel comfortable writing honestly. Self-reflection becomes much more difficult when people worry that deeply personal thoughts could become advertising data, appear on social media, or be accessed by someone else.
Apple built Journal around keeping personal reflections private. Journal Suggestions are generated using on-device intelligence instead of sending personal context to Apple’s servers for analysis.
Users also decide whether Journal can access Health data, choose what information appears in entries, and can lock the app with Face ID, Touch ID, or a device passcode.
Apple also protects Journal entries stored in iCloud with end-to-end encryption. As long as users enable two-factor authentication and secure their devices with a passcode, only their trusted devices hold the keys needed to decrypt journal entries.
Journal entries stored in iCloud remain end-to-end encrypted even when Advanced Data Protection is turned off.
Privacy alone doesn’t make journaling effective, but it can remove an important obstacle. Research on expressive writing consistently suggests that people are more willing to explore difficult thoughts and emotions when they believe their writing will remain confidential (Frattaroli, 2006).
Apple’s privacy model supports that process by making personal reflection feel like a conversation with yourself.
Consistency matters more than perfection
One of the clearest findings across habit research is that consistency usually matters more than intensity. Habits become part of daily life because repeating the same behavior gradually requires less conscious effort (Lally et al., 2010).
Journal reflects that understanding in dozens of small ways. Reminders encourage people to return at regular times, and suggested moments eliminate the pressure of finding something worth writing about.
The research also suggests people don’t need to write pages every night to benefit from reflection. Spending five or ten minutes thinking carefully about one meaningful experience is often easier to sustain than waiting for inspiration to produce a long journal entry (Smyth et al., 2018).
Pairing journaling with an existing routine, such as finishing dinner or plugging in an iPhone before bed, may also help reflection become part of everyday life instead of another goal competing for attention.
Looking back through older entries can be just as valuable as writing new ones. Individual entries often feel ordinary while they’re being written. Weeks or months of consistent reflection can reveal recurring themes that are difficult to notice in the moment.
Small sources of stress, recurring moments of gratitude, changing priorities, and gradual personal growth become much easier to recognize once enough experiences have accumulated on the page.
Journal doesn’t introduce a new theory of mental wellness. Apple built the app around well-established psychological principles and removed as much friction as possible from the act of reflection.
Reflective writing, expressed gratitude, habit formation, and self-monitoring can all make modest contributions to everyday well-being.
People stop because life gets busy, blank pages become intimidating, and habits quietly disappear. Journal addresses those problems with thoughtful design instead of exaggerated promises.
Journal’s greatest achievement may be its restraint. Rather than trying to convince people they need another wellness platform, Apple built software that steps aside and lets one of psychology’s oldest reflective practices become part of everyday life.
How Journal became my external memory
Research explains why reflective writing can be valuable, but one idea changed how I think about journaling. I stopped treating journaling as a diary and started thinking of it as an external brain.
I’ve been journaling through various apps since 2013, and it has become “A History of Andrew Thus Far.” I record interesting dreams, write down memories when one randomly pops into my head, and save photos and videos of memorable events.
Earlier in 2026, I started thinking about journaling differently. Instead of treating a journal entry as one long Captain’s Log of each day’s events, I began treating it like a personal social network.
I write multiple short entries a day, even if it’s one sentence, such as a joke I thought of or an insight into myself. Memory is fallible and I’ve learned of “cognitive offloading” in which a journal becomes an external archive.
My grandpa suffered from Alzheimer’s disease before he passed away, although I was too young to remember him much. Journaling, and apps like Reminders, are alternatives to posting sticky notes around my apartment so that I don’t forget important things.
Another aspect of journaling is thinking more about myself through time. Past Andrew, Present Andrew, and Future Andrew are part of a continuum. Present Andrew learns from Past Andrew to make sure that Future Andrew will be a good person.
Journaling helps me do that, and the wonderful thing about using an app is the ability to search through memories.
I hope that Apple creates a “On This Day” widget that surfaces old entries so that I can be reminded and even update past entries with current thoughts and experiences.
People may never read my journal, or maybe someday I’ll print it out at the end of my life. Journaling is a way to let the universe know that I was here, that I was able to exist.
References
There’s a lot that went into the research and use of this piece. In-line links didn’t seem appropriate in this case. Here’s what I’ve used over the years while developing my program, habits, and mindfulness.
Crane, C., Barnhofer, T., Visser, C., Nightingale, H., & Williams, J. M. G. (2007). Cue self-relevance affects autobiographical memory specificity in individuals with a history of major depression. Memory, 15(3), 312-323.
Cregg, D. R., & Cheavens, J. S. (2021). Gratitude interventions: Effective self-help? A meta-analysis of the impact on symptoms of depression and anxiety. Journal of Happiness Studies, 22(1), 413-445.
Frattaroli, J. (2006). Experimental disclosure and its moderators: A meta-analysis. Psychological Bulletin, 132(6), 823-865.
Kirca, M., Yldrm, M., & Bakrcolu, R. (2023). Expressed gratitude interventions: A meta-analysis. Journal of Well-Being Assessment, 7, 207-233.
Lally, P., van Jaarsveld, C. H. M., Potts, H. W. W., & Wardle, J. (2010). How are habits formed: Modelling habit formation in the real world. European Journal of Social Psychology, 40(6), 998-1009.
Reinhold, M., Brkner, P.-C., & Holling, H. (2018). Effects of expressive writing on depressive symptoms: A meta-analysis. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice, 25(1), e12224.
Smyth, J. M., Johnson, J. A., Auer, B. J., Lehman, E., Talamo, G., & Sciamanna, C. N. (2018). Online positive affect journaling in the improvement of mental distress and well-being in general medical patients with elevated anxiety symptoms: A preliminary randomized controlled trial. JMIR Mental Health, 5(4), e11290.
Sohal, M., Singh, P., Dhillon, B. S., & Gill, H. S. (2022). Efficacy of journaling in the management of mental illness: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Family Medicine and Community Health, 10(1), e001154.
Wright, L. A., Majid, M., Shajan, G., Momoh, G., Patil, R., Rawsthorne, M., Purewal, D., Patel, S., & Morriss, R. (2025). The user experience of ambulatory assessment and mood monitoring in depression: A systematic review and meta-synthesis. npj Digital Medicine, 8, 737.
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