Keep an elevation journal

Record moments of moral beauty you witness — in others and in yourself — to train your attention toward virtue.

Why it works

Journaling about positive emotions extends and deepens their impact beyond the moment of experience, through elaborative processing. An elevation-specific journal trains attention toward moral behavior in others, countering the negativity bias that makes threats more salient than virtue. Over time, the attentional pattern shifts: a person who journals elevation begins to notice it more frequently in ordinary interactions.

How to do it

  1. At the end of each day, write about one moment where you felt elevated — by someone else’s conduct, a story, or an encounter.
  2. Describe specifically what you saw, the feeling in your body, and the pull it created.
  3. Over time, begin to include moments where you yourself acted in a way that you hoped would elevate others.
  4. Review the journal monthly: what patterns appear in what elevates you? What does that reveal about your values?

Evidence

Expressive writing about positive emotions has some support from well-being research; elevation- specific journaling is a practitioner application of the elevation research rather than a separately trialed intervention. (mechanistic)

The attentional training mechanism is theoretically sound but elevation-specific journaling has not been tested in controlled studies.

Common mistake

Listing elevation triggers without describing the phenomenology — the feeling in the body and the behavioral pull are what distinguish elevation from ordinary positive emotion, so they need to be recorded.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach integrates elevation journaling into your reflection practice, surfacing what kinds of virtue most move you and using that as a window into your deepest values.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).