Today marks my 3,000th day in a row of writing my morning pages. That’s right—three handwritten pages, every single morning, without fail, for over eight years. If that sounds a bit obsessive, I get it. But hear me out.
For someone like me, who lives with ADHD and tends to have a mind that jumps from one thought to the next faster than a hummingbird in a flower garden, this practice has been nothing short of life-changing. Morning pages provide a space for me to clear the clutter, center myself, and establish a meaningful tone for the day.
I first discovered morning pages in Julia Cameron’s classic book, The Artist’s Way. If you’ve never read it, do yourself a favor and pick up a copy. It’s not just for writers or artists—it’s for anyone who wants to live with more creativity, purpose, and peace of mind.
So today, in honor of this milestone, I want to share what I’ve learned from the process and offer you a few practical suggestions to help you try it for yourself.
What Are Morning Pages?
Let’s start with the basics. Morning pages are three pages of longhand, stream-of-consciousness writing done first thing in the morning. You don’t write them to be read. You don’t worry about grammar, punctuation, or structure. You just write.
They’re meant to be a brain dump—a way of getting all the junk, noise, worries, and randomness out of your head and onto the page. And in doing so, you create space. You center yourself. You often uncover insights and clarity you didn’t even know were waiting to surface.
Why I’ve Stuck With It for 3,000 Days
It started as a curiosity. Could I do it for a week? A month? Then it became a habit. Then a ritual. Then something much more profound.
Here’s what morning pages have given me:
- Clarity: They help me figure out what I’m thinking and feeling, especially when I’m overwhelmed.
- Focus: Writing first thing allows me to set intentions, define priorities, and begin the day on my terms.
- Self-awareness: Over time, patterns emerge in the pages. What I worry about, what I avoid, what keeps resurfacing—this gives me powerful insight.
- Emotional release: On tough days, the pages absorb my frustration, anxiety, or self-doubt. And I feel lighter afterward.
- A safe space: No judgment, no audience, no pressure. Just me, my pen, and the page.
Honestly, it’s like a form of morning meditation—with ink instead of silence.
5 Practical Tips to Start Your Own Morning Pages Practice
If this sounds intriguing and you’d like to give it a try, here are five simple ways to start:
1. Start With a Simple Notebook and Pen
Don’t overthink it. You don’t need a fancy journal or special pen. I use simple spiral-bound notebooks and ballpoint pens. The key is to make it accessible so there’s no friction between you and the page.
Buy a few cheap notebooks, keep them by your bedside, and you’re ready to go.
2. Write First Thing—Before Email, Before Coffee, Before Everything
Morning pages work best when you write before the world starts demanding things from you. Before the phone pings, before the to-do list screams for attention.
This is time just for you. I usually wake up, get a glass of water, and sit down to write. No distractions. Just pen and page. It doesn’t have to be deep. Just write whatever’s on your mind.
3. Don’t Worry About What You Write—Keep the Pen Moving
Your morning pages aren’t supposed to be profound. They’re not meant to be edited or shared. Sometimes, I write complete nonsense. Other days, I find clarity, ideas for projects, or solutions to problems.
But here’s the key: keep writing. Even if all you write is “I don’t know what to write” twenty times, it still works.
Trust the process. There’s gold in the junk drawer of your mind.
4. Stick With Three Pages
There’s something powerful about the length Julia Cameron recommends: three full pages.
It usually takes about 20–30 minutes, which is just enough time for your brain to go from surface-level stuff to deeper insights. The first page might be grumbling. The second might be planning. And by the third, you often hit something meaningful.
Please don’t cut it short. There’s something almost magical about pushing through the initial resistance.
5. Give It 30 Days—And Don’t Read Them Back Yet
Think of it like a 30-day experiment. Don’t worry about whether it’s “working” in week one. Don’t read your pages yet—that can invite judgment or overthinking.
Show up, write three pages, close the notebook, and continue with your day. At the end of 30 days, then reflect on what’s shifted.
You might notice you’re calmer. Clearer. More creative. Or maybe more in touch with what you really want from your life.
Final Thoughts: Morning Pages Aren’t Just for Writers
I often get asked if this practice is only for writers. My answer? Absolutely not.
Morning pages are for anyone who wants to achieve greater clarity, focus, emotional resilience, or creative flow. They’re for anyone navigating a noisy world and trying to stay grounded in what matters.
For me, they’ve been a lifeline, a mirror, and a sanctuary. And they’ve shown me that when you commit to something consistently, even imperfectly, transformation happens—one morning at a time.
So if your mind feels cluttered, if you’re carrying stress, or if you want to reconnect with yourself in a quiet, meaningful way, give it a try.
Three pages.
Every morning.
No expectations.
You might find something waiting in the margins that surprises you.