Just because they are gone, does not make them forgotten. The idea of not creating new memories with someone can be devastating, but it can also allow you to remember the most important memories. when someone passes on or leaves your life they are kept ‘alive’ by your remembrance and memories. This does not mean that it is an easy obstacle to hurdle, and that is why we want to support your journey. The Love Story provides both an online journal and an online community of Journal-Artists designed to hold space for you to process the overwhelming flood of suppressed emotions and situations that lead to where you are right now. The beginning of treating emotional challenges is creative expression. Through creative expression you will learn the power of putting down your words for emotional release. Explore how our journaling program will help you process that pain inside the genre of “Journal-Artism,” a writing modality that fuses journaling and journalism with the personal journey. Begin the process of transforming your loss into creative expression so you can begin to forgive and free yourself. Reveal, deal, feel, and heal. 
Meet The Journal-Artists

We explore truth in fiction, while illuminating our shadows.

We fortify our faith through the sword of the spirit in the written word.

We are the Journal-Artist Producers—sharply spoken and broken open.

Recovery

That person was a part of you, and realistically it will take some time top recover. Knowing you cannot just flip the switch on being OK will help you in recovering from grief.

Self-Respect

Self-respect is earned through watching yourself set healthy boundaries, you cannot hope to be OK in a few days. Listen to your body and surround yourself with others who care about your human growth and allow time to grieve.

Love

Love yourself and find joy in the small things. Be spontaneous and don’t be afraid to be vulnerable.

Don’t know where to begin? Watch this guided mediation and see what emotions come to the surface, start writing about those. There is no right answer of what you are supposed to write or how you are supposed to write.

Finding love after loss

Explore

Find inspiration and learn the potency of written word. Explore stories shared from others within our archive of over 750+ Journal Entries, designed to activate your subconscious.

Learn

Identify different ways you can tell your story by exploring over 100+ artist interviews about transforming pain into purpose and using that purpose to show their creative expression.

Express

Are you ready to journal your truth? Download Your  Love Story Digital Diary Here.

We are a community of Journal-Artists who have experienced pain, hardship, and trauma. We are also working through the process of transforming our loss into what gives us strength. Be seen, be heard, be a part of a community of writers. Begin the process of journaling on your own timing and pacing. Be among a community of kindred spirits who are hearing, supporting and understanding one another, peer to peer.  

Features of Act I

  • Peer to peer journaling
  • Processing your story in fiction
  • Judgement-free zone
  • For us by us, community others working on emotional growth
Testimonials about Journaling in Act One

“You have the ability to just be like, ‘you know, this is my truth and if anybody doesn’t like it that’s fine because as far as they are concerned, everything that I’m saying is not real.’ It’s really helpful to know that people aren’t gonna to know what’s real, what’s not real, with what you write. You can release things and nobody will be the wiser about it.”

Chelsea Wolfe
Journal-Artist

“I want to go back and explore. Why did it happen when it happened. …Women often suppress their emotions…we think, ‘if I just swallowed that back, it’ll go away,’ and it’s like ‘Nope! Still here.’ and so I think I’m starting to really figure, I can’t swallow that back. I need to let things out.”

Dorothy England
Journal-Artist

“The point of journaling is to really just look inside and be like, ‘okay, what is this? Why am I feeling it? And what do I do with it?’ And that’s sort of what you have to ask yourself when you are journaling.”

Kali Paszkiewicz
Journal-Artist