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Writing Journal Sage

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Writing Journal Sage

The School of Life's Writing Journal Sage is designed to promote greater calm, joy, and self-awareness through the practice of writing. This A5-sized journal features a soft sage cover with rounded corners, a bellyband, and an elastic closure.
Inside, you'll find approximately 192 dot gridded pages, providing ample space to capture and explore your thoughts, feelings, and memories.

Details

Measures 21 x 14,8 cm
Counts approx. 192 dot gridded pages
Features softcover

The School of Life x Misc Store Amsterdam

Alain de Botton founded The School of Life in 2008. His aim was to make philosophy — long seen as the inaccessible, inauthentic stuff of academies and archives — a functional aspect of modern life. The care with which ancient philosophers thought about their lives remains a valuable antidote to the generalised anxiety of our era.

The school thus posits that ideas of Plato, Aristotle and the Stoics are as relevant to us today as they were in ancient Greece. Even if Epicurus never had social media burnout, understanding his thinking can lead us to a healthier relationship with , for example, our phones — and by extension, with one another.

We began stocking The School of Life’s series on work, gratitude and pleasure as a way of thinking through modern day issues. We admire their series for the capacity to stimulate reflection, and their ability to give a new perspective on age old problems. At its core, it is a set of strategies for finding meaning in the modern world.

The School of Life's Writing Journal Sage is designed to promote greater calm, joy, and self-awareness through the practice of writing. This A5-sized journal features a soft sage cover with rounded corners, a bellyband, and an elastic closure.
Inside, you'll find approximately 192 dot gridded pages, providing ample space to capture and explore your thoughts, feelings, and memories.

Details

Measures 21 x 14,8 cm
Counts approx. 192 dot gridded pages
Features softcover

The School of Life x Misc Store Amsterdam

Alain de Botton founded The School of Life in 2008. His aim was to make philosophy — long seen as the inaccessible, inauthentic stuff of academies and archives — a functional aspect of modern life. The care with which ancient philosophers thought about their lives remains a valuable antidote to the generalised anxiety of our era.

The school thus posits that ideas of Plato, Aristotle and the Stoics are as relevant to us today as they were in ancient Greece. Even if Epicurus never had social media burnout, understanding his thinking can lead us to a healthier relationship with , for example, our phones — and by extension, with one another.

We began stocking The School of Life’s series on work, gratitude and pleasure as a way of thinking through modern day issues. We admire their series for the capacity to stimulate reflection, and their ability to give a new perspective on age old problems. At its core, it is a set of strategies for finding meaning in the modern world.

$8.15

Original: $23.28

-65%
Writing Journal Sage

$23.28

$8.15

Description

The School of Life's Writing Journal Sage is designed to promote greater calm, joy, and self-awareness through the practice of writing. This A5-sized journal features a soft sage cover with rounded corners, a bellyband, and an elastic closure.
Inside, you'll find approximately 192 dot gridded pages, providing ample space to capture and explore your thoughts, feelings, and memories.

Details

Measures 21 x 14,8 cm
Counts approx. 192 dot gridded pages
Features softcover

The School of Life x Misc Store Amsterdam

Alain de Botton founded The School of Life in 2008. His aim was to make philosophy — long seen as the inaccessible, inauthentic stuff of academies and archives — a functional aspect of modern life. The care with which ancient philosophers thought about their lives remains a valuable antidote to the generalised anxiety of our era.

The school thus posits that ideas of Plato, Aristotle and the Stoics are as relevant to us today as they were in ancient Greece. Even if Epicurus never had social media burnout, understanding his thinking can lead us to a healthier relationship with , for example, our phones — and by extension, with one another.

We began stocking The School of Life’s series on work, gratitude and pleasure as a way of thinking through modern day issues. We admire their series for the capacity to stimulate reflection, and their ability to give a new perspective on age old problems. At its core, it is a set of strategies for finding meaning in the modern world.