In 1993, I made a decision that I carried with me for decades. I chose to visit my friends… instead of going to see my dad in the hospital. And later that same day… he passed away. I was 12 years old.
And for a long time, that moment lived quietly in the background of my life… showing up in the form of guilt, regret, and a question I couldn’t stop asking myself: What if I had chosen differently?
As a pre-teen, I would scribble and doodle my way through diaries, writing things down like disaster haircuts and school fights, to whichever boy I was currently infatuated with. I wasn’t a big writer; certainly nothing deep or emotion-heavy. My grammar was poor.
Discovering my 1993 diary many years later helped me understand what kind of person I was back then. I was young and immature. Reflecting on that period of my life with adult wisdom helped me clear the guilt I had felt for so long. Had my scribbles been confined to a digital recording on a floppy disk, they would have been forgotten.
And keeping a diary or planner to write in is a practice that has stayed with me well into adulthood (and has become the core of my business!).
If you feel stuck in your life, unsure of your next step, or what you really want to do — this is for you. What follows is a practical, science-backed guide to manifesting your dreams, creating clarity, building focus, healing emotionally and growing confidence through the simple act of writing things down.
Table of contents
- Power #1: Manifesting dreams
- Power #2: Creating clarity
- Power #3: Building focus
- Power #4: Healing emotionally
- Power #5: Growing confidence
- Conclusion: You are the architect of your story
The power of writing things down
Power #1: Manifesting dreams
How can writing things down help me get what I want?
Writing down your dreams and goals doesn’t just document them — it actively trains your brain to pursue them.
Buried within your brain is a sophisticated filtering system that quietly shapes what you notice every day. Neuroscientists call it the salience network — a group of brain regions that continuously scan your environment and decide what deserves your attention. It’s why, once you decide you want a particular car, you suddenly see it everywhere. The cars were always there. Your brain has simply started flagging them as important.
Neuroscientist Dr. Tara Swart, author of The Source (2019), calls this process value tagging. When you write down a goal with clarity and intention, you are effectively sending a signal to your brain: this matters. Your brain responds by prioritising information aligned with that value — and you start to notice opportunities, connections, and pathways that were always present but previously invisible to you.
This is the work at the heart of the Make Your Mark Self-Coaching Journal. Chapter 1 walks you through a process of uncovering your passions and shaping them into a clear Big Vision — the kind of specific, emotionally resonant picture of your future that gives your RAS something real to work with. It’s not wishful thinking. It’s practical neuroscience. Find out how to use the Make Your Mark journal here.
We also recommend using a tool like our World-Class Performer Dream Activation audio. It allows you to enter a state of deep relaxation so you can truly imagine these details of your life before putting pen to paper.
If you feel unsure what your passions or strengths truly are, this is exactly where to pause and explore. Our passion discovery printables were created for this moment — to help you reconnect with what lights you up, beyond expectations or external definitions of success.
Power #2: Creating clarity
Can writing things down help me when I’m overwhelmed?
When we’re overwhelmed, we’re usually trying to hold too many things in our heads at once — weighing options, second-guessing, cross-referencing — and our brains can’t keep up. The result is mental gridlock: everything feels overwhelming, nothing feels solvable, and we end up making no decisions at all.
Entrepreneur and investor Tim Ferris has a method for handling difficult situations called “Fear-Setting”. You take whatever is worrying you and turn it into an action plan. Write down the worst-case scenario that could happen, what you could do to avoid the worst-case scenario happening, and how you could recover from the worst-case scenario if it happened.
This method works because it forces us to see that most “risks” are either preventable or reversible, and the “cost of inaction” (what happens if you don’t change anything) is often much more dangerous than the risk of trying.
This approach has helped me find clarity in many stressful situations in my life, and inspired the Worry Be Gone Clarity Journal. This journal uses structured writing prompts to help you clear persistent worries and make specific decisions, so you can get closer to the life you truly want.
Power #3: Building focus
How can writing things down improve my focus and productivity?
In 2011, Harvard Business School professor Teresa Amabile published findings from a decade of research that quietly changed how progressive organisations think about motivation. After analysing nearly twelve thousand diary entries from knowledge workers across multiple industries, Amabile and co-author Steven Kramer identified what they called The Progress Principle: the single most powerful motivator on any given day is the feeling of making meaningful progress on work that matters.
Not a pay rise. Not recognition. Just progress — even small, incremental forward movement.
The process of setting goals on paper, and setting priorities aligned with those goals helps you focus on what’s meaningful, and provides the initial motivational fuel needed for long-term effort.
There’s a second benefit too. Researcher Sophie Leroy identified something she called Attention Residue — the cognitive drag that happens when we switch tasks without properly closing the previous one. Every open loop, every “I’ll come back to that,” leaves a trace of mental activity still running in the background, reducing the focus available for whatever you’re doing now. Writing down what’s done and what’s next acts as a mental closure ritual, reducing that residue and sharpening your ability to be present.
The LH Organisers are built around this principle — helping you map your day through an important-and-urgent framework that turns a cluttered schedule into a clear sequence, so your attention can land fully on the important task in front of you.
This is where goal setting with intention becomes powerful — because you’re no longer succumbing to other people’s priorities, but building a plan that reflects your values and needs. To support this, we’ve created Goals planning – free downloadable sheets — a simple, guided way to map out your big goals and break them into meaningful, achievable steps.
Power #4: Healing emotionally
Can writing things down help my anxiety?
Most of us are dealing with our inner world the wrong way — and it’s not our fault.
When something difficult happens, we do what feels natural: we think about it. We turn it over on the drive home, replay it in the shower, lie awake rehearsing conversations that already happened or ones we’re dreading. We call this “processing.” But what’s actually happening is looping — cycling the same unresolved thought or feeling without ever reaching resolution.
There’s a reason for this. Early twentieth-century psychologist Bluma Zeigarnik discovered that the brain holds unfinished things active in working memory. Unresolved tasks, incomplete conversations, unexpressed emotions — they sit in the brain’s “active RAM,” consuming energy, fuelling background anxiety, and making it harder to focus on anything else. This is the Zeigarnik Effect.
In 2007, neuroscientist Dr. Matthew Lieberman and his team at UCLA used brain imaging to show that when people use words to describe their emotional experiences — a process he called “affect labelling” — activity in the amygdala, the brain’s fear and threat-response centre, measurably decreases. At the same time, activity increases in the prefrontal cortex — the part of the brain responsible for rational thought and perspective.
Naming what you feel, in writing, literally calms the brain’s alarm system and activates its reasoning centre. The act of reaching for words — even imperfect ones — interrupts the threat response and begins emotional regulation from the inside out.
Healing also requires honesty, and honesty requires safety. Dr. Brené Brown’s research in Daring Greatly (2012) showed that vulnerability — the willingness to be seen in our uncertainty, fear, and imperfection — isn’t weakness. It’s where real change begins. A diary or planner is one of the safest places most of us have to practise that kind of honesty. There’s no audience, no judgement, no version of yourself to perform.
This is why our LH Planners begin with Self-Discovery pages to help you get vulnerable and go deep on where you’re at and what’s most important to you. Write as if no one will ever read it — because that freedom is where the real work happens.
Power #5: Growing confidence
How do I build confidence through writing things down?
This might be the most quietly powerful benefit of writing things down.
Stanford psychologist Carol Dweck developed the concept of the “growth mindset”. She found that individuals who believe their talents can be developed through hard work, good strategies and input from others have this growth mindset — they tend to achieve more than those who believe they were just born with their talents.
Sometimes it can feel like we’re not making any progress. But when we track our day-to-day through writing things down, we start to see how far we’ve actually come and recognise our own strength and power. When we train our brain to find the lesson in all things, we begin to view our talents, abilities and potential as things we can improve and enhance — major confidence boost!
Recording wins, challenges and lessons learned is a core part of our LH Planners, designed to support your long-term development. With goal setting prompts and regular reflections (including monthly and yearly), our planners give you the structure to look back at where you started, see how far you’ve come, and build confidence grounded in your own real experience. Find out how to use the LH Planner here.
If you’re new to structured reflection, our Year-end review – free downloadable sheets are a meaningful way to begin. They guide you through reviewing your wins, challenges, and lessons — helping you close one chapter with intention before stepping into the next.
The way we speak to ourselves on paper also has a direct impact on our resilience and confidence. Dr. Kristin Neff, a researcher at the University of Texas, has spent years studying what happens when people treat themselves with the same kindness they’d offer a friend. Her research found that people who write about their struggles and mistakes with warmth rather than self-criticism show significantly higher levels of resilience, emotional wellbeing, and motivation than those who default to a harsh inner voice.
Most of us have an internal narrative that isn’t particularly kind. The voice that catalogues every mistake, replays every embarrassing moment, and keeps a running commentary on everything going wrong. We’d never speak to a friend that way — but we speak to ourselves in those terms constantly. And because the brain can’t easily tell the difference between an external threat and an internal one, that critical voice creates real stress.
Writing offers us a different way. When you write to yourself about a failure or a fear with deliberate kindness, something gradually shifts. The critic gets quieter. And in that space, a steadier kind of confidence starts to grow — not the performed kind, but the kind that comes from knowing you can make sense of whatever comes at you.
You Are the Architect of Your Story
I want to come back to 12-year-old me for a moment.
She didn’t know that by writing things down in her diary she was beginning a practice she’d carry for the rest of her life. She didn’t know about Zeigarnik Effects or Reticular Activating Systems or affect labelling. She just found the joy in doing it.
What she came to understand over time is that our diaries and planners aren’t just a record of what’s already happened. It’s a tool for shaping what comes next. It’s how we stop drifting and start designing our best selves. How we move from feeling like life is happening to us, to understanding that we are the ones writing it.
You can’t change the past. But you absolutely can design the future. Every entry is a choice to pay attention. To make meaning from the everyday. To take the raw, sometimes messy material of your inner life and work through it into something you can understand and use to make your life even better.
If you want to change your life, change the story you tell yourself about it. The best place to edit that story is on the page.
Start by exploring what truly matters to you. Download our passion discovery printables to uncover your “why”, or use our goals planning sheets to turn that clarity into action. Because when you begin with intention, everything else starts to fall into place.

Kasia Gospoś is the founder of LH Agenda, a wellness lifestyle brand dedicated to empowering women to lead with clarity, intention, and purpose. What began as a personal journey to create more meaningful structure and balance has evolved into a global movement supporting modern women through thoughtfully designed planners, journals, and tools that nurture mental fitness, resilience, and self-leadership. At its heart, LH Agenda exists to help you move from overwhelm to alignment, and to design a life that reflects who you truly are and who you are becoming.
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