It is a recurring topic on the reddit Journaling sub, Mom accidentally read my Journal, or My cousin read my diary, and so on. Bet it a cousin, a dad, a mom (my mom read my journal when I was a kid and my life changed, not for the best), siblings, SO, colleagues,… People may rightfully feel devastated after someone read their journal without their permission.

It goes without saying that no one should read a journal without being invited to. And that there is no such thing as an ‘accidental reading’ of a journal.

Anyone accidentally reading more than a few words of the first page in a journal is doing it on purpose. They decided to read (a little, or a lot more of) the intimate thoughts and words of another other person because they wanted to read it.

Do you protect the privacy of your journal? And if so, how?

I used to, as a kid (after the ‘mom even’ I mentioned). I learned to replace names with fictitious ones, and to hide my journal in odd places. I also very quickly learned to write in English, because she could not read English and because, back in those days, there was no such thing as the Internet with instant-translation. Also, I knew very well she would never dare ask anyone to translate it for her, she was way too afraid of people reaction and judgment. She did try to coerce me into translating it, though… with little luck. Later, I learned to… destroy all my old journals, in order to preserve my privacy.

As a young adult, I kept it hidden in a box or in a drawer with a lock.

And as a less young adult, I quit hiding it. I did kept regularly destroying it, alas. A sad habit I only quit recently.

Nowadays, my journal sits on my desk (and the few remaining old ones are in plain sight on a bookshelf). My spouse could easily take it and read it the moment I turn away. But I know she would never do that, not without me telling her to read it. Like she knows I would never go through her paper without her permission. In the 25 years we’ve been together, we’ve learned to trust each other and to be OK with not sharing everything together, We both have our little if not secret at least they’re private gardens. But I also realize I’m very lucky to live with someone like her.

Have you ever experimented such an intrusion in your privacy? Or would that be ok for you?

If privacy matters to you, how do you manage to protect it? Do you ask to your SO other, or kids or whomever to simply respect your privacy, do you store it in some place? Do you use a password protected digital journal? Or?

Digital is safer?

As much as I prefer a paper and pen journal, I must admit that a digital journal is probably the best option for anyone concerned with privacy.

Be it in most word processors, like LibreOffice Writer (which is free), MS Word, or even Apple Pages, it’s very easy to password protect a document so no one can open it without knowing that password. And if you’re using a dedicated journaling app (like DayOne that I have used for many, many years next to my paper journal), there is an option to password protect it. And I’m pretty sure it’s the case with most if not all apps.

Feel free to share your own experience!

  • Libb@jlai.luOP
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    8 days ago

    digital is safer in the terms that family wouldn’t read it. Personally I gave up trying digital though because every diary I have tried so far either looked like trash, didn’t run on Debian or lacked a meaningful password protect (one that didn’t keep the file plain text and have the lock on the software itself)

    Have you tried LibreOffice Writer? It can encrypt natively and it works great on my dear Debian (and on Mint, too). It’s not plain text files but it’s an open standard.

    I would rather have some random person I the internet steal it over my family steal it, the chances of it actually being leaked to someone meaningful is low enough that it’s not a worry to me, but I can’t shake the feeling if I forget to lock my system family could access it freely, which would be devistating.

    This is very true! And it deserves a lot more considerations, I think.

    I mean, I’m lucky enough to know I can trust my spouse (I have zero protection on my journal which sits on my desk for her to grab anytime she feels like it, save that I know she never would do such a thing) but if that was not the case, if we coudl not trust each other on those questions, being able to prioritize the ‘threat level’ is essential. What would I fear more? Sure, that would be family getting a glimpse of my most intimate thoughts much more than a stranger reading it, aka:

    It’s not that I write about the family but that they are meant to show you in your more vulnerable states, and that’s not something I would like my family being involved in.

    Again: +1

    So, if I may ask, how do you protect the privacy of your analog journal? You put in a safe box of some sort or a drawer with a lock?

    • Pika@sh.itjust.works
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      8 days ago

      I was not aware LibreOffice had an encrypt option, I’ll have to look at it. I was focusing on mostly journal or diary programs so I missed that one.

      As for my written journal, i have a small safe that I keep documents in that I store that in as well, I also have a shared usage luks partition on my system that I keep digital entries in if I do have to use digital, it’s just in plaintext with no manager for them currently. It’s one of the hindrances I have to entry making. analog side my penmanship sucks hardcore, but digital is annoying to keep safe.

      I will have to look into writer though, the encryption feature sounds quite useful

      • Libb@jlai.luOP
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        8 days ago

        I was not aware LibreOffice had an encrypt option,

        Yep, it does. It’s just a matter of checking the password option when you save it:

        LibreOffice Writer, saving a password protected document option

        And to type the password when you want to open the file:

        LibreOffice Writer, opening a password protected document option