Menu Only
A couple writing in a shared journal on a rainy evening

from our little love diary

How to Start a Couple Journal Together (Simple Guide for Beginners)

We started our couple journal on a rainy evening when the wifi was down and we had nothing to do. I found an old empty notebook in a drawer, and as a joke I wrote one line at the top: "things we don't want to forget." I passed it to him. He smiled and wrote something back. Two years later, that notebook is the thing I'd grab first if the house was on fire.

If you've ever thought about starting one but felt it was silly or too much work, this is for you. A couple journal is honestly one of the easiest, sweetest things you can build together, and you don't need to be a writer at all.

Here's everything we wish someone had told us when we started.

What a couple journal actually is

An open handwritten notebook with a movie ticket and dried flower
just a notebook that holds your story

A couple journal is just a shared notebook where the two of you write things down together. That's it. There's no rule book.

Some couples use it to note down sweet moments. Some write little letters to each other. Some track their fights and how they made up, so they don't repeat the same silly arguments. Some just stick movie tickets and write one line about the day. Ours is a mix of all of that, and it's beautifully messy.

The point isn't to write something deep every day. The point is to have one place that holds your story. Years from now, you'll open it and remember the small things you'd have otherwise forgotten. The inside joke from a random Tuesday. The way you felt on your first trip. The hard week you got through together.

That's the magic. It turns ordinary days into something you can hold.

Picking your journal and a routine

Notebooks, pens, tea and a candle on a wooden table
any notebook works, promise

Don't overthink this part. Any notebook works. A plain diary, a cheap notebook, even your notes app if you both prefer typing. We like a physical one because handwriting feels more personal, and you can doodle and stick things in it. But use whatever you'll actually keep up with.

The bigger thing is the routine. Decide how you'll share it. There are two simple ways that work.

One, you keep one notebook and pass it back and forth. You write, then leave it on their pillow or bag for them to reply. This feels like little love notes.

Two, you both sit together once a week, maybe Sunday night with some tea, and write side by side. This becomes a cosy ritual you look forward to.

tip

Keep it low pressure. If you miss a few days, that's completely fine. The journal waits for you. It's not homework.

What to write in your first week

A hand writing in a notebook by warm lamp light
the first page is the only hard one

The blank first page is the scariest part. So here's exactly what to write so you don't freeze.

On day one, both of you write why you wanted to start this journal. Just a few honest lines. This becomes a lovely thing to read later.

For the rest of the week, keep it simple and take turns. Write one good thing that happened that day. Write one thing you appreciated about your partner. Write something you're looking forward to. Some days, just write a single funny line about what happened. There's no minimum.

If you want, leave little questions for each other to answer the next day. We did this a lot in the start. One of us would write a question at the bottom of the page, and the other would wake up to it and reply. It made the journal feel alive, like a slow conversation that never quite ended.

Prompts to use when you feel stuck

A couple thinking together over a shared notebook
blank mind? pick one and go

Some days your mind goes blank, and that's normal. Keep this little list in the back of your journal and pick one whenever you don't know what to write.

  • What made you smile today?
  • What's something you're grateful for about us right now?
  • What's a small thing I did this week that you noticed?
  • What's a memory of us you keep coming back to?
  • What are you looking forward to doing together?
  • What's something you want us to try?
  • What's been on your mind lately?
  • What does a perfect weekend with me look like to you?
  • What's one thing you love about our home or our routine?
  • Write a tiny letter to us five years from now.

Use one a day, or one a week. Answer them together or take turns. There's no wrong way to do it.

When things feel heavy, you can also use the journal to write through it. Not to blame, just to be honest. Writing down "this is what hurt and this is what I needed" is sometimes easier than saying it out loud. Then you read each other's words and understand a little better. It has saved us a few times.

A few honest tips from us

A couple reading old journal entries together
reading old pages on a low day hits different

Keep it private. The journal only works if you both feel safe being real in it. Don't share it or read bits out to friends.

Don't compete with the couples online whose journals look like art projects. Yours can be scribbles and coffee stains. The words matter, not the looks.

And go back and read old entries sometimes. On a low day, reading how much you've grown together is the best feeling. It reminds you that this thing you're building is real and worth it.

Your questions, answered

What do you write in a couple journal?+

Anything that holds your story. Sweet moments, things you appreciate about each other, daily highlights, little letters, questions for each other, or how you worked through a hard time. There's no fixed format.

How do we start a couple journal as beginners?+

Grab any notebook, decide whether you'll pass it back and forth or write together once a week, and on day one just write why you both wanted to start. Keep it simple and low pressure.

How often should we write in it?+

As often as feels good. Daily, weekly, or whenever something worth remembering happens. Missing days is completely fine. The journal isn't a chore.

Can a couple journal help our relationship?+

Yes. It helps you notice the good things, understand each other better, and work through tough moments in a calm way. Reading old entries also reminds you how far you've come together.

Is a digital journal okay, or should it be a physical notebook?+

Both work. A physical notebook feels more personal and lets you doodle and stick things in. A shared notes app or doc is easier if you live apart or prefer typing. Use whatever you'll actually keep up with.

— made with love, from both of us