Resources for reflective practice
Free guides, PDFs, journaling tools, quizzes, and practical resources for applied Stoic philosophy.
This library was created to help you move from reading about Stoicism to practicing reflection, attention, and intentional daily rituals in a simple, structured way.
Start with one resource. Use it slowly. Return to it often. Philosophy becomes useful when it becomes repeatable.
Reflection Prompts
Begin with better questions.
A printable PDF with 30 reflective prompts for journaling, evening review, self-observation, and thoughtful daily practice.
- Reflection questions inspired by Stoic practice
- Simple prompts for morning or evening journaling
- A calm starting point for building consistency
Start here
These resources are designed for the first month of StoicSkills: useful, simple, and connected to the main learning paths of the site.
A free downloadable PDF for journaling, evening review, and thoughtful self-observation.
Download → JournalLearn how to create a simple journaling rhythm using observation, reflection, and daily review.
Open guide → QuizDiscover how you naturally approach reflection, attention, decision-making, and daily practice.
Take quiz → CourseA beginner-friendly introduction to applied Stoic philosophy and practical reflection.
Start learning → BlogArticles on Stoic foundations, daily practices, journaling, reading guides, and modern life.
Read articles → EmailWeekly reflections on philosophy, attention, journaling, and intentional daily practice.
Join newsletter →Build a reflective habit
Stoic practice often begins with writing: observing your thoughts, reviewing your actions, and asking better questions before reacting automatically.
Evening reflection
Use a simple evening review to notice where you acted with clarity, where you reacted too quickly, and what you want to practice tomorrow.
Explore the journal hub →Weekly review
Once a week, return to your notes and look for patterns: distractions, decisions, recurring reactions, and moments of steadiness.
Receive weekly reflections →Read Stoicism slowly
The best Stoic texts reward slow reading. These starting points help you move from isolated quotes to deeper understanding and practical interpretation.
A beginner-friendly guide to the core ideas, history, and practical meaning of Stoic philosophy.
Read guide → ReadingA slow-reading guide to Marcus Aurelius, reflective notes, and the practice behind the text.
Read guide → PracticeA practical starting point for turning philosophy into a simple daily rhythm.
Open article →StoicSkills resources are educational materials only. They do not provide medical, psychological, psychiatric, therapeutic, legal, financial, or emergency advice. Read the full Disclaimer.