Morning Journal Prompts: Feeling Map
AI Prompt for Morning Journal Prompts
turns a vague mood into a named feeling, trigger, need, and next step for morning journal prompts, with context fields, copy-ready instructions, output structure, and quality checks tailored to people using journaling for private reflection.
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Best use case
Morning Journal Prompts for users who want more than a one-line question: a guided entry with reflection, structure, and an action they can actually use. This prompt turns a vague mood into a named feeling, trigger, need, and next step.
Context to provide
- [current situation or topic]
- [feeling, question, or pattern to explore]
- [important people or setting]
- [what you want to understand]
- [one limit, boundary, or next step you can control]
Copy-ready prompt
You are helping me with Morning Journal Prompts. My audience is people using journaling for private reflection. My topic is the day ahead, likely friction, and one grounded intention.
Task: Map the feeling from body signal to likely trigger, then guide a reflective entry that separates facts, interpretations, and needs.
Use the context I provide. If a missing detail would change the quality of the answer, ask one concise clarifying question before drafting. Keep the tone private, kind, concrete, and honest. Build toward a clear journal entry with insight and a realistic next step. Avoid generic filler, unsupported claims, and copy that could appear on any other page.
Output format
Feeling name, trigger, body signal, need, one kind action.
Quality checks
- Use self-reflection language, not therapy, diagnosis, crisis support, or medical advice.
- If the topic feels unsafe, urgent, or overwhelming, suggest reaching out to a trusted person or qualified professional.
- Do not force positivity, forgiveness, disclosure, or a single correct answer.
- Do not diagnose or label the user; keep it reflective and practical.
- Use concrete moments instead of broad claims like 'I feel bad.'
Example output pattern
Feeling: anxious. Trigger: unread message. Need: clarity. Next step: ask directly.
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How to customize this prompt
Replace the bracketed placeholders with your own context before running the prompt:
[current situation or topic]— fill in your specific current situation or topic.[feeling, question, or pattern to explore]— fill in your specific feeling, question, or pattern to explore.[important people or setting]— fill in your specific important people or setting.[what you want to understand]— fill in your specific what you want to understand.[one limit, boundary, or next step you can control]— fill in your specific one limit, boundary, or next step you can control.
Tags
Who this is for
- People searching for Morning Journal Prompts
- Morning Journal Prompts for users who want more than a one-line question: a guided entry with reflection, structure, and an action they can actually use.
- turns a vague mood into a named feeling, trigger, need, and next step
Example output
Strong output pattern: Feeling: anxious. Trigger: unread message. Need: clarity. Next step: ask directly.
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