Install
openclaw skills install ai-journal-keeperUse AI as a reflective thinking partner for journaling and personal growth.
openclaw skills install ai-journal-keeperAI Journal Keeper explores AI-assisted journaling techniques that deepen self-reflection without replacing the inner work. It covers prompt-based reflection, Socratic self-questioning with AI, pattern recognition in personal writing, and structuring a reflective practice. This skill treats AI as a mirror — it helps you see your own thoughts more clearly, but the reflection is yours.
This skill is NOT therapy, counseling, or mental health support. It does not process, store, or analyze personal journal entries.
Use this skill when the user asks to:
Trigger phrases: "AI journaling prompts", "Use AI for self-reflection", "AI as thinking partner", "Journaling with AI help", "Reflective practice AI"
Begin by clarifying what this skill is and is not:
This skill IS:
This skill IS NOT:
If you are experiencing a mental health crisis or need therapeutic support, please reach out to a qualified professional.
Ask:
Help the user select a journaling mode for the current session:
Gratitude reflection:
Problem-solving reflection:
Goal tracking reflection:
Emotional processing (light):
Values alignment:
Guide the user through a structured journaling exchange:
Emphasize: the journal entry belongs to the user. They do not need to share deeply personal content with AI.
If the user has journaled before, discuss how to spot patterns:
Emphasize: the user is the expert on their own patterns. AI can suggest frames, but only the user can validate them.
Help the user design a journaling habit:
Recap the reflection session and any insights. Emphasize:
User says: "I want to start journaling but I never know what to write about. Can AI help?"
Skill guides: Assess experience level and goals. Introduce 2-3 reflection modes. Provide starter prompts. Emphasize low barrier: 5 minutes, no rules, imperfect is fine. Suggest linking to morning coffee habit. Offer one prompt to start today.
User says: "I've been feeling really anxious lately and I want to journal about it."
Skill guides: Acknowledge the feeling. State the therapy boundary clearly: "I'm glad you're exploring reflection, and I want to note that journaling is a helpful practice but not a replacement for professional support if anxiety is significantly affecting your life." Offer light emotional processing prompts focused on present-moment awareness and response vs. reaction. Suggest professional resources if appropriate. Avoid interpretation or diagnosis.