logo
‘Dear diary, he's doing it again': Charles Assisi on journaling in third-person

‘Dear diary, he's doing it again': Charles Assisi on journaling in third-person

Hindustan Times24-05-2025

Every night, just before sleep, he gets into bed. The house is quiet. The lights are dim. As his family sleeps, he opens Evernote, to write in his diary.
The man is me. What follows is a story about how, after 12 years of maintaining a diary, I found that something had changed.
The habit started quietly, as so many life-altering things do. Not in a blaze of insight or a firm resolve, but during a season when nothing felt right. I didn't know whom to talk to, or what to say if I did. So I started to write things down.
At first, the notes were simple facts of the everyday. What I ate. Whom I met. What irked me. Over time, I began to put down more of my day: feelings, conflicts, regrets. Revisiting these notes, it intrigued me to see how time had frozen on the page. In these pages, I found a mirror that didn't flatter, but certainly reflected. And allowed me to reflect.
For years, I wrote the diary in the first-person. 'I should've spoken up.' 'I'm anxious about this project.' 'I miss her.' It was a confessional booth where the only priest was me.
Then a friend, leadership coach Vivek Singh, suggested I write in the third-person instead. It would allow me look at myself more dispassionately, he said. I wasn't sure, but I tried it anyway.
'He felt the anger rising. A part of the him asked him to stay put. But he lost his head and the plot. Why does he do that again and again?'
The line rewired everything for me. The diary turned from a monologue into a conversation. I could now observe myself as if I were a character in a novel, or a colleague I'd grown used to but never truly seen. From that distance, something curious happened: the storms inside started to look distant.
He, the man in the pages, wasn't always noble. He ducked when he should've stepped forward. He laughed when it was time to tell the truth. He took comfort in indecision and called it caution. But he also made quiet decisions no one saw, stayed when it would have been easier to walk away, and protected things fragile and precious with a kind of stubborn tenderness.
As the voice changed, the tone of the notes did too. 'Why didn't he say yes to that opportunity? Why does he always wait for certainty?' It didn't accuse. It didn't absolve. It observed. It noticed. It nudged.
There were times I wanted to throw the diary across the room. Because it caught me. Revealed me. Saw me lie to myself. It recorded what I wasn't ready to read. But curiously, it also seemed to forgive, and it helped me learn to forgive myself.
The voice in the diary is my voice, and yet it isn't. It speaks to me like no one else ever could. The third-person allows me to see my multiple selves. I see a man who sometimes fails, yes, but is also persistent. A man always trying to be better.
Soon enough, the book began to serve as a source of advice, and not the friendly pat-on-the-back version either. This was hard-won counsel drawn from the bruises I rarely admit to off the page. The notes from the past serve as somewhat-dispassionate reminders: 'He's done this before. And he knows how it ends.' Or: 'He handled that better than last time. Not bad!'
There's a reason we trust old friends. They know the backstory. The third-person diary has become one such friend. The kind that shows up even when you're sick of yourself. Knows when to call your bluff, and when to hold your hand.
Writing in the third-person has helped me name things I wasn't ready to own. Regret. Hope. Longing. That secret pride I feel watching someone I love grow into themselves. The gnawing fear of becoming irrelevant. The pride and quiet joy of doing the right thing when no one's watching.
I don't know if this practice is for everyone. But I know this: I'm not the man I was when I began. That feels like reason enough to continue.
So yes. He still writes. Quietly. At night.
And every now and then, the diary writes back. Not with answers, but with better questions. If I'm right, those questions are shaping the man who turns out the lights and lies down a little lighter. They're readying him for tomorrow.
(Charles Assisi is co-founder of Founding Fuel. He can be reached on assisi@foundingfuel.com)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump signals 'possible' US involvement in Iran conflict – DW – 06/15/2025
Trump signals 'possible' US involvement in Iran conflict – DW – 06/15/2025

DW

time25 minutes ago

  • DW

Trump signals 'possible' US involvement in Iran conflict – DW – 06/15/2025

Skip next section Trump says US involvement in conflict 'possible' 06/15/2025 June 15, 2025 Trump says US involvement in conflict 'possible' US President Donald Trump told ABC News that "it's possible we could get involved" in the conflict between Israel and Iran. Trump nevertheless stressed that Washington was not "at this moment" involved. The US president added that he would be "open" to mediation by Russian President Vladimir Putin. "He is ready. He called me about it. We had a long talk about it, " ABC News quoted him as telling Rachel Scott.

Macron visits Greenland to show European support for strategic Arctic island
Macron visits Greenland to show European support for strategic Arctic island

Glasgow Times

time26 minutes ago

  • Glasgow Times

Macron visits Greenland to show European support for strategic Arctic island

Mr Macron reiterated his criticism of Mr Trump's intention to take control of the territory. 'I don't think that's something to be done between allies,' he said as he was greeted at the Nuuk airport by Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen and Greenlandic Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen. French President Emmanuel Macron arrives at Nuuk Airport in Nuuk, Greenland (Mads Claus Rasmussen/Scanpix via AP) 'It's important to show that Denmark and Europe are committed to this territory, which has very high strategic stakes and whose territorial integrity must be respected,' Mr Macron said. He was making a stop on his way to a summit of the Group of Seven leading industrialised nations in Canada that will also be attended by Mr Trump. Mr Macron, who is visiting Greenland for the first time, said: 'It means a lot to me … to convey a message of friendship and solidarity from France and the European Union to help this territory face the different challenges: economic development, education, as well as the consequences of climate change.' In a speech last week at the UN Ocean Conference, Mr Macron also mentioned Greenland and the deep seas, saying they are not 'up for grabs' in remarks that appeared directed largely at Mr Trump. Mr Macron, in recent months, has sought to reinvigorate France's role as the diplomatic and economic heavyweight of the 27-nation European Union. The French president has positioned himself as a leader in Europe amid Mr Trump's threats to pull support from Ukraine as it fights against Russia's invasion. Mr Macron hosted a summit in Paris with other European heads of state to discuss Kyiv, as well as security issues on the continent. The French president has positioned himself as a leader in Europe amid Trump's threats to pull support from Ukraine as it fights against Russia's invasion (Stefan Rousseau/PA) Sunday's visit will also be the occasion to discuss how to enhance relations between the EU and Greenland further when it comes to economic development, low-carbon energy transition and critical minerals. The leaders will also have exchanges on efforts to curb global warming, according to Mr Macron's office. Later Sunday, Mr Macron, Mr Frederiksen and Mr Nielsen held a meeting on a Danish helicopter carrier, showing France's concerns over security issues in the region. Last week, US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth appeared to acknowledge that the Pentagon has developed plans to take over Greenland and Panama by force if necessary, but refused to answer repeated questions during a hotly combative congressional hearing on Thursday about his use of Signal chats to discuss military operations. Mr Hegseth's comments were the latest controversial remarks made by a member of the Trump administration about the Arctic island. The president himself has said he won't rule out military force to take over Greenland, which he considers vital to American security in the high north. The Wall Street Journal last month reported that several high-ranking officials under the US director of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard, had directed intelligence agency heads to learn more about Greenland's independence movement and sentiment about US resource extraction there. Mr Nielsen said that US statements about the island have been disrespectful and that Greenland 'will never, ever be a piece of property that can be bought by just anyone'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store