Stoic Journaling: Marcus Aurelius's Morning and Evening Practice
Two thousand years ago, a Roman emperor wrote to himself each morning to prepare for the day, and a statesman examined his conscience each night before sleep. Their habit is still the most durable resilience practice we have — and it takes ten minutes.
The short version
- Stoic journaling has two bookends: a morning preparation (like Marcus Aurelius) to set your mind, and an evening review (like Seneca) to examine how you actually lived.
- The whole thing runs on the dichotomy of control — separating what is yours to govern (your effort, judgment, response) from what isn't (outcomes, other people, the weather).
- It takes about ten minutes a day, five each end. Brevity is the point; Marcus wrote in fragments, not essays.
- You don't need to study philosophy first. A few prompts and one idea are enough to begin tonight.
- The payoff is a steadier character — less reactivity, clearer judgment, and a record of how you're actually growing.
On this page
- What Stoic journaling actually is
- The two source texts: Marcus and Seneca
- The one idea that holds it together
- The morning preparation (Marcus's practice)
- The evening review (Seneca's practice)
- A complete morning & evening template
- Three classic Stoic techniques to fold in
- How to actually keep the practice
- Frequently asked questions
Stoic journaling is a daily reflective practice with two bookends: a morning preparation, modeled on Marcus Aurelius, where you ready your mind for the day and sort what you can control from what you can't; and an evening review, modeled on Seneca, where you examine how you actually lived. It takes about ten minutes a day, requires no prior study, and is the oldest resilience practice we know works. Below is exactly how to keep one, with a complete prompt template you can use tonight.
What makes this method different from most journaling is its purpose. You're not writing to remember a day, or to vent, or to be a better writer. You're writing to build a more reliable character — to become, slowly and deliberately, someone who is harder to knock over. The Stoics treated this as training, the way an athlete treats the gym. The journal is where the reps happen.
What Stoic journaling actually is
A Stoic journal is a private place where you practice philosophy as a daily exercise rather than as theory. The Greek word the Stoics used was askēsis — discipline, training, the work you do on yourself. Reading about virtue does nothing on its own; you become patient by rehearsing patience, calm by rehearsing calm. The journal is the rehearsal space.
In practice it has a simple shape. In the morning you prepare: you look at the day coming and decide who you want to be inside it. At night you review: you look at the day that happened and ask, honestly, how you did. That's the whole architecture. Everything else — the prompts, the quotations, the techniques — hangs off those two moments. If you've explored other systems in our field guide to types of journaling methods, you'll recognize the bookended structure; it's close kin to the 5-minute journal method, only older by two millennia and aimed at virtue rather than mood.
Stoicism is not about suppressing emotion or pretending nothing bothers you. That's the pop-culture caricature. The actual goal is to feel things fully but not be ruled by them — to keep your judgment intact when life pushes. The journal is how you practice the difference.
The two source texts: Marcus and Seneca
The reason this method has structure rather than vibes is that it descends from two of the most famous documents in Western thought, both of them essentially private journals.
Marcus Aurelius and the morning mind
The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius — Roman emperor from 161 to 180 AD — was never written for us. It carries the Greek title Ta eis heauton, "to himself." It is a working journal, written in fragments, often at night during military campaigns, in which the most powerful man in the world reminded himself how to be good. He opens Book II with a line that reads exactly like a morning preparation: "When you wake up in the morning, tell yourself: the people I deal with today will be meddling, ungrateful, arrogant… But I have seen the beauty of good, and the ugliness of evil." That is marcus aurelius journaling in one sentence — bracing yourself for friction before it arrives, so it doesn't catch you off guard.
Seneca and the evening reckoning
Seneca, the statesman and tutor to Nero, described the other bookend in his essay On Anger. Borrowing a habit from the philosopher Sextius, he wrote that every night, once the lamp was out and his wife was quiet, he examined his whole day: "What bad habit have you cured today? What fault have you resisted? In what respect are you better?" This nightly self-examination — gentle, exacting, never cruel — is the template for the seneca evening reflection half of the practice. Together, Marcus's morning and Seneca's evening form the complete loop.
"I will keep constant watch over myself and — most usefully — will put each day up for review. For this is what makes us evil — that none of us looks back upon our own lives." — Seneca
The one idea that holds it together
If you remember nothing else, remember this: the dichotomy of control. Epictetus, a former slave who became the most influential Stoic teacher, opens his Enchiridion with it. "Some things are within our power, and some are not." Within your power: your judgments, your choices, your effort, your response. Outside it: your reputation, other people's behavior, the outcome of anything, your body's frailty, the past, the future. Nearly all human suffering, the Stoics argued, comes from getting this line wrong — from staking our peace on things we were never able to govern.
This single distinction is the engine of every Stoic journal prompt. When you write in the morning, you're sorting the day's worries onto the correct side of that line. When you review at night, you're checking whether you wasted any energy on the wrong side. A Stoic journal is, more than anything, a daily instrument for asking: is this mine to control, or not?
Draw a literal line down the page. On the left, write what about today is in your control. On the right, what isn't. Then commit, in one sentence, to spending your worry only on the left column. This is the simplest possible Stoic entry, and on a busy day it's enough on its own.
The morning preparation (Marcus's practice)
The morning entry is short and forward-looking. You're not recording anything yet — you're tuning the instrument before you play. Five minutes, before the day grabs you. Think of it as installing a frame you'll see the day through. Here are the reliable morning stoic prompts, each tied to a piece of the philosophy:
- What is in my control today, and what is not? The dichotomy of control, applied to whatever is actually on your plate.
- What obstacles might I meet, and who do I want to be when they come? Marcus's bracing line — name the friction before it arrives.
- Which virtue do I most need today? The four Stoic virtues are wisdom, justice, courage, and temperance. Pick the one this day will demand.
- What would a person of good character do in the situations I'm walking into? A way to pre-decide your conduct while you're calm.
- What am I taking for granted that won't always be here? A quiet nod to impermanence, which sharpens the day rather than darkening it.
You don't answer all five. Most mornings, one or two is plenty. The aim is a settled, prepared mind — to walk into the day already knowing who you intend to be inside it. If the idea of a structured dawn entry appeals to you, it pairs naturally with morning pages, though Stoic preparation is far shorter and more pointed than Cameron's three free-written pages.
The morning entry doesn't predict the day. It prepares the person who'll meet it.
The evening review (Seneca's practice)
The evening entry is the heart of the practice and the one most people skip — which is a shame, because reflection is where the learning actually lives. This is Seneca's nightly self-examination, and its defining feature is its tone: searching but never punishing. You are a fair judge reviewing the day's evidence, not a prosecutor. The evening review stoic prompts are these:
- What did I do well today? Start here, always. Name a moment you acted with character. This isn't ego; it's reinforcing the behavior you want.
- Where did I fall short, and why? Be specific and honest. Where were you reactive, unkind, lazy, dishonest? What was underneath it?
- What would a wiser version of me have done? The most useful prompt in the whole practice. It turns a regret into a rehearsal for next time.
- What did I worry about that wasn't mine to control? Catch the wasted energy so tomorrow you spend less of it.
- What am I grateful for, and what can I now set down? Close the day clean, so it doesn't follow you into sleep.
The crucial rule, which the Stoics insisted on: judge the deed, not yourself. "I acted impatiently" is useful. "I am a terrible, impatient person" is just self-flagellation dressed as reflection, and it teaches you nothing. This nightly examination is a close cousin of the end-of-day reflection; the Stoic version simply adds the moral dimension — not just what happened, but who was I in it.
Stoic self-examination is a practice for steadiness and growth, not a treatment for clinical conditions. If your evening review keeps tipping into harsh self-criticism, rumination, or despair, that's worth taking seriously rather than journaling through alone — a therapist can help. Our guide to journaling for mental health covers where reflective writing helps and where professional care belongs.
A complete morning & evening template
Here is the full daily structure in one place — the bookend ritual you can copy straight into a notebook, an app, or speak aloud. Nothing here is mandatory; treat it as a menu, not a checklist.
| When | Prompt | What it trains |
|---|---|---|
| Morning | What's in my control today, and what isn't? | Clear judgment; less wasted worry |
| Morning | What obstacles might arise, and how do I want to respond? | Composure; pre-decided conduct |
| Morning | Which virtue will I practice today? | Intentional character |
| Daytime | One line from Marcus, Seneca, or Epictetus to carry | A maxim to steady you mid-day |
| Evening | What did I do well today? | Reinforcing good action |
| Evening | Where did I fall short, and why? | Honest, specific self-knowledge |
| Evening | What would a wiser me have done? | Rehearsal for next time |
| Evening | What am I grateful for, and what can I set down? | Acceptance; a clean close |
If even this feels like too much on a hard day, collapse it: one line in the morning naming what's in your control, one line at night naming what you'd do differently. That's a complete Stoic journal. For an even more minimal cadence, the one line a day journal shows how a single sentence, kept faithfully, accrues into something remarkable over years.
Three classic Stoic techniques to fold in
Once the morning–evening rhythm is steady, three named exercises from the tradition deepen the practice. Use them when a prompt feels thin.
Premeditatio malorum (the premeditation of adversity)
In the morning, briefly rehearse what could go wrong today — the meeting that sours, the plan that falls through, the loss you fear. Not to dread it, but to disarm it: a misfortune you've already imagined arrives without the shock. Seneca put it plainly: "He robs present ills of their power who has perceived their coming beforehand." On the page, it's a single line: Today I might face ___; if it comes, I can still act well.
The view from above
When a problem feels enormous, Marcus repeatedly zoomed out — picturing his troubles from a great height, against the scale of the whole earth and the sweep of time. Written down, it shrinks a catastrophe back to its real size: Seen from a year out, from a continent away, how big is this actually?
Negative visualization and gratitude
Imagine, for a moment, losing what you have — the people, the health, the ordinary comforts you've stopped noticing. The Stoics used this not to wallow but to restore gratitude for what's still here. It dovetails beautifully with a gratitude journaling habit, and it's the antidote to the way good things quietly fade into the background. If you tend to carry yesterday's grievances forward, the related move of deliberately releasing them is its own skill — our prompts for letting go sit right alongside the Stoic idea of accepting what you cannot control.
How to actually keep the practice
The Stoics would be the first to tell you that knowing the method is the easy part. Here is how to keep a Stoic journal alive past the first enthusiastic week.
- Anchor each bookend to something fixed. Morning prep rides your first coffee; evening review rides getting into bed. Habit beats willpower — more on this in how to be consistent with journaling.
- Keep it genuinely short. Two or three lines per end. The Stoics prized daily repetition over length; a five-minute entry kept for a year beats a brilliant page abandoned in February.
- Don't wait to "understand Stoicism" first. The understanding comes through the writing. Start tonight with one prompt; read Marcus and Epictetus alongside, not before.
- Reread your reviews monthly. Patterns surface — the same fault, the same wasted worry — and seeing the pattern is half of changing it.
- Forgive missed days immediately. A Stoic of all people knows a broken streak is not in your control once it's happened; only the next entry is. Just begin again.
If you're weighing this against other systems before you commit, our honest comparison of which journaling practice fits you can help you decide whether the morning–evening Stoic loop is your method or just one to borrow techniques from.
This is the quiet promise of the practice. You will not become unshakeable in a week. But day by day, in five honest minutes at each end, you build a record of a person paying attention to their own character — and that attention, repeated, is the thing that actually changes you. Marcus did it under campaign tents while running an empire. Your version, done in bed with the lamp still on, is no less serious.
Fond can make the bookends easier to keep: it can read your morning preparation prompts aloud to you while the coffee brews, and capture your spoken evening review at night — turning the Stoic ritual into something you can do eyes-closed, no page to face and no pen to find. The words you say are transcribed and quietly kept, the way Marcus kept his to himself.
Frequently asked questions
What is Stoic journaling?
Stoic journaling is a reflective practice of morning preparation and evening review modeled on Marcus Aurelius and Seneca. In the morning you prepare your mind for the day and sort what you can control from what you can't; at night you examine how you actually lived. The goal is not a pretty diary but a steadier, wiser character built one ordinary day at a time.
What are good Stoic morning prompts?
Ask: what is in my control today, and what is not? What obstacles might arise, and how do I want to respond to them? Which virtue do I most want to practice? Who am I likely to deal with, and how can I meet them with patience? These prompts prepare your judgment before the day tests it.
What are good Stoic evening prompts?
Ask, as Seneca did: what did I do well today? Where did I fall short, and why? What would a wiser version of me have done differently? What am I grateful for, and what is now safely behind me? The evening review judges the deed, not the self, so you can sleep settled and start fresh.
How long does a Stoic journaling session take?
About five minutes in the morning and five minutes in the evening, roughly ten minutes a day in total. The practice is deliberately short. Marcus Aurelius wrote his Meditations in brief fragments, and the Stoics valued the steadiness of daily repetition far more than the length of any single entry.
Do I need to study philosophy first?
No. You can start a Stoic journal today with nothing more than the dichotomy of control and a handful of prompts. The understanding deepens through the practice itself, not before it. Reading Marcus, Seneca, and Epictetus enriches the work, but the daily writing is where Stoicism actually becomes yours.