What is Morning Pages?
Morning Pages is a daily writing practice consisting of three pages of longhand, stream-of-consciousness writing completed first thing in the morning. Introduced by author and creativity teacher Julia Cameron in her 1992 book The Artist’s Way, the practice requires writing continuously without stopping to edit, censor, or reflect on what appears on the page. The content is deliberately unfiltered—complaints, observations, fragments of dreams, mundane details, anxieties, or seemingly trivial thoughts all qualify as valid material. The pages are not intended to be art, insight, or even coherent; they function as a daily mental clearing mechanism.
Origins & Lineage
Julia Cameron published The Artist’s Way: A Spiritual Path to Higher Creativity in 1992 through Tarcher/Putnam. Cameron, a filmmaker, playwright, and journalist who had worked in Hollywood, developed the 12-week program after her own recovery from alcoholism and creative blocks in the 1980s. She drew on her experience with 12-step programs, Transcendental Meditation, and her exploration of spiritual practices to create a structured approach to unblocking creativity.
Morning Pages emerged as the foundational tool in Cameron’s system. She described them as “spiritual windshield wipers,” a daily practice to clear mental clutter and access what she called the “inner creator.” While Cameron’s work synthesized various influences—including Dorothea Brande’s 1934 book Becoming a Writer, which recommended early-morning automatic writing, and Natalie Goldberg’s 1986 Writing Down the Bones, which emphasized unedited freewriting—the specific three-page, longhand, first-thing-in-the-morning format is Cameron’s distinct contribution.
The Artist’s Way became an unexpected cultural phenomenon, selling millions of copies and spawning thousands of facilitated groups worldwide. The book’s longevity kept Morning Pages in circulation across multiple generations of creative practitioners.
How It’s Practiced
Practitioners write three pages—roughly 750 words—in a notebook immediately upon waking, ideally before other activities like checking phones, exercising, or talking to others. The practice is explicitly analog; Cameron insists on handwriting rather than typing, arguing that the slower physical pace of pen-on-paper bypasses the inner critic more effectively and creates a different relationship with the material.
There are no rules about content. Writers are instructed to keep the pen moving even when nothing feels worth writing. Common subjects include immediate concerns (“I’m tired,” “I don’t know what to write”), processing of previous day’s events, worry loops, creative ideas, relationship dynamics, or observations about physical surroundings. The writing is private by default—Cameron recommends not reading the pages for at least eight weeks, if at all.
The pages typically take 30-40 minutes to complete. Practitioners report the first page often contains surface complaints and mental noise, the second page may drift into problem-solving or memory, and the third page occasionally yields unexpected insights or emotional releases. However, this pattern is neither universal nor necessary; “boring” pages are considered equally valid as cathartic ones.
Morning Pages Today
Morning Pages has become one of the most widely practiced secular contemplative writing exercises in the English-speaking world. It appears in creativity coaching, therapeutic writing programs, and self-directed spiritual practices. Artist’s Way facilitation groups—both volunteer-led and professionally facilitated—continue to introduce new practitioners to the method.
The practice has been adapted into digital formats despite Cameron’s objections. The website 750words.com (launched 2009) provides a typing-based platform that tracks daily writing streaks. Countless apps offer morning journaling features, though purists maintain these miss the essential embodied quality of handwriting.
Morning Pages appears in university creative writing curricula, corporate innovation workshops, and addiction recovery programs. Mental health professionals sometimes recommend it as an adjunct practice, though it is not therapy and Cameron does not present it as such. Writers including Elizabeth Gilbert, Tim Ferriss, and numerous memoirists have publicly credited the practice with breaking through resistance.
Common Misconceptions
Morning Pages is not journaling in the conventional sense. Traditional journaling often involves reflection, narrative construction, or processing specific events. Morning Pages explicitly rejects these aims in favor of unfiltered, pre-reflective capture. There is no topic, no “dear diary,” no attempt at craft.
The practice is not primarily about producing usable creative material. While insights occasionally emerge, the pages themselves are considered disposable. Cameron describes them as a “drain” rather than a “vein”—a way to remove blockages, not to strike gold. Reading old pages is optional and often discouraged.
Morning Pages does not require writing ability, good grammar, or literacy in any literary sense. Repetitive phrases, sentence fragments, and illegible scrawl all fulfill the practice’s requirements. The point is continuation, not quality.
Finally, Morning Pages is not inherently spiritual, though Cameron frames it within a spiritual context. Practitioners with no spiritual orientation practice it as cognitive hygiene. The method functions independently of belief in Cameron’s concept of a “Creative Source” or any higher power.
How to Begin
The primary source is Julia Cameron’s The Artist’s Way (1992), which provides the full 12-week program in which Morning Pages is embedded. Cameron also published The Artist’s Way Morning Pages Journal (1995), a blank journal with brief instructions, and The Right to Write (1998), which explores the practice in greater depth.
To begin: acquire a notebook and pen. Upon waking, before other activities, write three pages of continuous longhand. Write whatever arises. Do not stop to edit, cross out, or reread. When three pages are complete, close the notebook. Repeat daily. Cameron recommends committing to eight weeks before evaluating the practice’s effects.
No teacher, class, or special instruction is required, though many find support in Artist’s Way groups. The practice is self-directed and free beyond the cost of materials.