Emily: Rachel, I love how this course goes straight to the root of human behavior. How does your program help people gain a deep understanding of their core motivations and the hidden reasons behind what they do?
Rachel: It all comes down to breaking past the surface. Through mindful journaling prompts and reflection, this course provides exploratory questions about your core beliefs to show you exactly how they drive your everyday behavior. We identify specific recurring patterns, emotional triggers, and look at how emotions influence your decision-making. By engaging in this self-inquiry process, you can begin to unravel the complexities of your own motivations and gain incredibly valuable insights into yourself.
We even delve into various techniques and perspectives to help you challenge your existing, rigid beliefs. By examining your life experiences from entirely different angles, you gain a broader understanding of your personal truth. Ultimately, the goal is to empower you to make conscious choices aligned with your authentic self so you can navigate life with greater clarity, purpose, and self-awareness.
Emily: Journaling is often talked about as a great tool for self-care, but your approach goes much further. How does the dual practices of journaling and contemplation contribute so profoundly to a person's understanding of themselves?
Rachel: Writing is deeply healing because it creates a completely safe, private sanctuary to explore situations and feelings without needing to be perfect. You can keep writing until you strike the truth you’re trying to expose. In fact, we often begin writing about one specific problem only to realize by the end of the page that the story is actually about something else altogether — something much deeper that we never would have realized without going on that journey on paper.
Getting a looping thought out of your head and onto paper forms a level of clarity that you might never find if you just let it roll over and over in your mind. It allows you to explore a memory as if it were an independent object, gaining a healthy sense of separation from yourself. It’s in digging up these recurring themes where your true wisdom hides, and in this process, you almost always find deep compassion for yourself and others, along with a genuine sense of closure.
Emily: Your course format is highly focused on the interactive writing prompts that participants do each week. Why was it so important to you to build the program around active implementation rather than just passive reading?
Rachel: I’m a fierce believer in "doing the work". I’ve personally read countless self-improvement books and taken dozens of courses, and what I constantly found is that it's entirely possible to understand a beautiful concept on an intellectual level without ever getting that information to stick in a meaningful, life-changing way. Because authors and presenters are speaking to a crowd, they can never know your specific history, so the information is always given in a general, one-size-fits-all way.
Real, undeniable progress only happens when you explore how a topic relates directly to your own unique life and your past. When a person finally sits down, slows down, and applies the framework to themselves — that is exactly when the magic happens. That is where the healing happens, and where your personal wisdom is born.
Emily: Throughout these lessons, you do ask participants to remember moments in their lives
that could potentially feel a bit scary or traumatic to revisit. What is your advice for someone who wants to take the course but worries they might not be emotionally ready to delve into those heavy experiences?
Rachel: Being hesitant is 100 percent okay, and the absolute most important rule to remember while going through this entire course is to always prioritize your own self-care and mental wellness. I never want a student to force themselves into a painful memory that scares them without having the proper emotional tools to handle it. If a prompt asks for a memory and you feel you need to swap it out for a much lighter, less intense experience for inspiration that week, that is always encouraged.
You can also choose to skip a week entirely if you need to. While the act of writing alone is incredibly therapeutic, I strongly encourage participants to seek outside support — whether that’s a trusted friend, a licensed therapist, or a spiritual professional — whenever a theme becomes too difficult to process alone. You, your safety, and your wellness are always the first priority.
Emily: To wrap things up, who is this course ultimately for? Do students need to have a background in creative writing, or can complete beginners find their footing here?
Rachel: Absolutely not, you don’t need to be a writer! This course is designed equally for novices and advanced writers alike, and it doesn’t matter if you’ve never even written a single sentence in a diary before. What makes this course special is that each weekly lesson features several different prompts; you can choose a single prompt if it immediately speaks to your heart, or walk through all of them to naturally spark memories and fresh ideas.
Together, we explore so many fascinating aspects of life that you may have never even considered writing or thinking about before, allowing you to discover entirely new ways to perceive old memories. We hear the phrases "going inward" and "discovering your inner wisdom" all the time, but self-help rarely explains how we’re supposed to actually do that. This course bridges that gap, making it easy to map out your past, your desires, and your core beliefs on paper, connecting the themes as you go and moving closer toward your truest, most authentic self each week.
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