The discussed journaling protocol involves writing about one's most negative experience and often leads to strong emotional reactions, including distress and anxiety.
Participants are advised to include a cool-down period after writing to return to a calm state before resuming daily activities.
The protocol is intensive, with the same negative experience written about for 15-30 minutes on four consecutive days or once a week for a month.
Trauma, as defined by Dr. Paul Conti, is an experience that modifies our brain and neural circuitry, impacting our emotional, behavioral, or cognitive functioning.
Everyone has experienced stressors, which may constitute trauma, and journaling addresses these difficult experiences to elicit positive mental and physical health changes through processing.
This type of journaling is a short-term yet intense psychological exercise.
Individuals who undergo the journaling protocol tend to split into two categories: low expressors and high expressors, which are unrelated to introversion or extroversion.
Low expressors use less descriptive language and exhibit less emotional and physiological distress while writing about their experiences.
High expressors use more negative language to describe their feelings and show higher degrees of emotional turmoil and physiological stress indicators such as increased cortisol levels and heart rate.
While high expressors experience a reduction in distress over successive writing bouts, low expressors show an increase in distress over time.
Regardless of whether one is a low or high expressor, the journaling protocol benefits both groups, leading to reduced distress and baseline stress levels seen weeks, or even years, after completing the exercise.
Individuals vary in their ability to express emotions through speech and writing.
Research by Pennebaker shows that language patterns reflect psychological and emotional states.
Patterns of using negative or positive vocabulary words correlate with corresponding emotional states.
The study "Natural Emotion Vocabularies as Windows on Distress and Well-being" focusses on natural language patterns rather than vocabulary knowledge.
People with a broader vocabulary for negative emotions tend to have more depressive states, while the opposite is true for positive vocabulary.
It's the frequent use of certain types of words that is more important than the knowledge of these words.
After completing four writing sessions, it is instructive to analyze the language patterns used across entries, noting shifts toward more positive language use over time.
Pennebaker's protocol suggests writing about facts, emotions at the time, and emotions now regarding a difficult experience.
Incorporation of any links between the experience and past, present, or future events should be included, no matter how indirect.
Writing in complete sentences is encouraged but perfect grammar is not necessary.
The protocol emphasizes the health benefits of writing without self-censorship and not for an audience.
Quality of writing for personal understanding is more important than for external consumption.
Unprocessed negative experiences can impact mental and physical health, whereas the writing protocol may aid in neuroplasticity and psychological wellness, reducing anxiety and improving mood, sleep, and immune function.
Over 200 quality peer-reviewed studies have confirmed significant and long-lasting physical improvements in individuals who engage in a specific journaling protocol.
Individuals with fibromyalgia reported notable reductions in chronic pain that persisted over time.
Participants with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) experienced relief of symptoms compared to those with IBS who did not follow the journaling protocol.
Control groups in these studies also wrote for 15 to 30 minutes about different, non-emotional content, establishing a scientific comparison to the experimental group practicing the specialized writing.
The unique strength of this protocol is the focus on emotional writing content, contrasting with other studies that might compare physical exercise interventions to control groups with different variables.
Studies involving a specific writing protocol have shown positive effects on mental and physical health, including improvements in autoimmune conditions, anxiety reduction, and sleep patterns.
These improvements are likely due to a constellation of physiological changes.
One key study by James Pennebaker, among others, examines how writing about traumas affects immune function, specifically T-lymphocytes.
Subjects doing the writing protocol had blood drawn before and 15 weeks after completing the writing exercises, showing monitoring that included psychological and physical assessments.
High disclosers, who shared more in their writing, showed greater immune activation in response to an infection mimicking challenge compared to low disclosers and control groups.
Findings from these expressive writing studies contribute to the broader understanding of psychoneuroimmunology, highlighting the connection between emotional state, writing, and immune system response.
Pennebaker, who suffered from asthma, deduced a connection between emotions and physical health from personal experiences, leading him to pioneer studies on how induced negative emotional writing can result in positive health outcomes.
The results question traditional views of separate body and mind functioning and suggest a counterintuitive approach: inducing a negative emotional state through writing might lead to positive changes in immune function and neuroplasticity.
Prefrontal cortex organization of autonomic response lessens unnecessary activation, reducing anxiety and insomnia.
Direct communication exists between the nervous system and immune system, with neural circuits affecting organs like the spleen.
Recent literature recognizes the interconnectedness of immunology, brain science, and psychology.
Journaling about stress or trauma induces beneficial mental and physical health changes, potentially through prefrontal cortexneuroplasticity.
Expressive writing, which involves truth-telling and accompanying emotion, enhances the effectiveness of other therapies, expediting recovery from depression and PTSD.