The therapeutic journal: self-observation and behavioral tracking

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychopractitioner
5 min read

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This article is available in French only.
Atomic Habits Workbook by James Clear reminds us: what isn't measured isn't improved. This maxim, valid for habits, is even more so in therapy. CBT grants the journal a central place—not as literary exercise, but as action research tool on oneself. Well used, a therapeutic journal accelerates therapy progress by 30-50%.

Why the journal works

Three mechanisms make the therapeutic journal effective:

1. Externalization: getting a thought out of your head onto paper creates cognitive distance. You move from "I am this thought" to "I'm looking at this thought." 2. Precision: the mind thinks in blurred images. Writing forces formulation. "I feel bad" becomes "I feel a chest contraction thinking about Monday's meeting, with fear of being criticized by my manager." 3. Pattern detection: rereading your journal over 2 weeks reveals recurrences invisible in daily life: anxious Mondays, recurring arguments, unnamed emotions.

The ABC matrix: basic format

Albert Ellis and Aaron Beck formalized a 3-column table that remains the world's most used CBT tool:

| A (Antecedent) | B (Behavior / thought) | C (Consequence) |
|----------------|------------------------|-----------------|
| Factual situation | Automatic thought + emotion | Behavior + intensity |

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Example:
  • A: My partner hasn't responded to my message in 3 hours
  • B: "He's not interested in me anymore" / anxiety 7/10
  • C: I send a reproachful message / tension all day
Once traced, adding a D column (Dispute) and E (Effect) enables restructuring:
  • D: What's the real evidence? Plausible alternatives? ("He's in meetings, as often on Mondays")
  • E: New emotion / new envisioned behavior (anxiety 3/10 / wait without reproach)

The 5 most useful CBT journals

1. Automatic thought journal

Goal: identify and restructure toxic thoughts.
Frequency: hot, at each strong emotion.
Format: ABCDE matrix.

2. Mood journal

Goal: detect emotional patterns.
Frequency: 3x daily (morning, noon, evening).
Format: 10-point score + 1 word for dominant emotion + 1 notable event.

3. Gratitude journal

Goal: counterbalance the brain's negativity bias.
Frequency: every evening, 5 minutes.
Format: 3 positive things of the day + why (the "why" is essential).

Studies: this simple exercise, practiced 2 months, significantly reduces depression scores (Seligman, Peterson).

4. Behavioral tracking

Goal: measure actions aligned with therapeutic objectives.
Frequency: daily.
Format: list of target behaviors, ✓ or ✗ each day.

5. Values journal

Goal: verify actions / deep values alignment.
Frequency: weekly (15 min Sunday).
Format: for each value, 0-10 score of week's alignment + 1 concrete action for next week.

The 5 rules of a good journal

Rule 1: precision over depth Write facts first, analysis second. "He said X at Y time" before "I think that..." Rule 2: short but regular 5 minutes daily for 3 months equals 100× an hour once weekly. Regularity creates the pattern. Rule 3: no judgment on writing Spelling, style, beauty don't matter. The journal isn't a book. Rule 4: note the positive too The brain is biased toward negative. Forcing successes noted is a therapeutic counter-bias. Rule 5: reread regularly An unread journal is half useless. Weekly rereading (15 min weekend) to spot trends.

Paper or digital?

Paper: better for emotional anchoring, memorization, discharge. Recommended for automatic thought journal. Digital (apps or notes): better for quantifiable patterns (mood scores, behavioral tracking). Allows graphs and easy rereading.

Best: combine—paper for emotions, digital for tracking.

SMART goals: between journal and action

For behavioral tracking to produce change, goals must be SMART:

  • Specific (not "exercise" but "run 10 min 3x/week")

  • Measurable (yes/no each day)

  • Achievable (not 45 min if you did zero)

  • Realistic (coherent with current life)

  • Time-bound (by when?)


The most frequent therapy failure comes from vague or too ambitious goals—not lack of willpower.

Journal pitfalls

Rumination-journal: writing turns into circular rumination, amplifying suffering instead of treating it. Sign: after writing, you feel worse. Solution: always end with an action or alternative. Confession-journal: long self-flagellation texts. Not therapeutic. CBT journal seeks facts and patterns, not confessions. Theater-journal: writing for an imaginary reader (therapist, glorious future self). Raw sincerity is indispensable.

How to start this week

  • Buy a notebook (simple paper) dedicated only to this journal
  • Day 1: one mood note 3x in the day (2 min total)
  • Day 2: add 3 gratitudes in evening
  • Day 3: at first difficult emotion, fill an ABC matrix
  • Day 7: reread these 7 days, look for a pattern
  • In 30 days, you'll probably have detected 2-3 previously invisible patterns. Often the starting point of a therapeutic shift.

    Takeaway

    The therapeutic journal isn't a school gimmick: it's a precision instrument transforming your blurred thoughts into usable data. Coupled with a CBT approach, it considerably accelerates progress. A bit of initial discipline, a few minutes daily—and a lasting change in self-relationship.

    If you have trouble keeping a journal alone or drawing insights from it, CBT support can help structure the approach and interpret what emerges.

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    Gildas Garrec, Psychopraticien TCC

    About the author

    Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner

    Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 900 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Sérénité.

    📚 16 published books📝 900+ articles🎓 CBT certified

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    The therapeutic journal: self-observation and behavioral tracking | Psychologie et Sérénité