For the Stray Line
A journal for the line that arrived without warning.
Poems don't come on a schedule. Catch them somewhere private and let them breathe.
A line arrives at a bus stop, in the kitchen, on the walk back from somewhere ordinary. You need somewhere to put it that isn't a Notes app synced to a company you've never met.
The Eternal Journal is that somewhere. The cursor is patient. The line will keep.
When the poem assembles itself, you can lift it out. The drafts stay buried.
The Typewriter Experience
The cursor stays. The text moves.
In Write mode, your cursor remains exactly at the centre of the screen. The page rises up to meet it. Past words fade into soft shadow at the edges, leaving the present sentence in clear focus. Switch to Read mode and the entry flattens into an evenly lit document — the fade is for writing; the flat light is for returning.
Radical Privacy & Encryption
AES-256-GCM, in your browser, with a key only you derive.
- ·PBKDF2 key derivation at 600,000 iterations — the OWASP 2024 recommendation. Existing journals upgrade transparently on first unlock.
- ·No accounts, no telemetry, no analytics, no cookies, no third-party scripts.
- ·IndexedDB storage with a localStorage fallback. Encrypted before it touches the disk.
- ·The file is not minified. You can read the source. We'd rather you trust it than us.
What It Does Not Do
- ✕No word counts chasing you across the screen.
- ✕No formatting toolbar wrestling your thoughts into neatness.
- ✕No cloud sync. No distant servers. Your words stay yours.
- ✕No social sharing. Your vulnerability is not content.
- ✕No AI assistant finishing your sentences.
- ✕No streak counters. No guilt. No gamification.
- ✕No subscriptions. No mood trackers. No noise.
Licensing & Gift Copy
One purchase covers up to three of your personal devices. It also includes a second untouched copy of the file — meant to be given to one person you trust. Lifetime updates. 30-day, no-questions refund. If you run a clinic, school, or workplace and want a copy for everyone, ask us about a site licence.
Questions
Is this a replacement for Scrivener or Ulysses?
No. The Eternal Journal is not a manuscript tool. It is a private writing space for drafts, notebooks, and the thinking that happens before the manuscript.
Does it have a word count?
No. We deliberately omit word counts, streak meters, and other measurement chrome. The point is to write, not to be measured.
Can I use Markdown or formatting?
Plain text by design. Your prose carries the rhythm — not bold, italics, or headings. If you need formatting, copy the text out at the end.
Is my work safe if my laptop is stolen?
Yes, provided you chose a strong passphrase. Entries are encrypted before they touch disk; without the passphrase, the file is mathematically opaque.
Can I keep separate journals for separate projects?
Yes. Each HTML file is an independent journal with its own passphrase. Many writers keep one per project, one for private notes, and one for morning pages.
More in For Writers
See all →A private notebook for the sentence you haven't found yet.
First-draft thinking deserves a room with the door closed. The Eternal Journal is that room.
A morning pages app that respects the practice.
Julia Cameron prescribed three pages, longhand, every morning. The Eternal Journal is the closest a screen comes.
Where character voices live before they have names.
A private place for fragments, voices, scene scraps, and the things you'd never put in your shared writing folder.
Before the script, the scribble.
A private, offline place for the half-ideas that don't belong in a shared draft yet.
A journal built for not stopping.
The cursor stays put. The text moves. Your hands keep going.
A diary app that treats you like an adult.
No mood faces. No streaks. No "how are we feeling today?" Just a passphrase and a page.
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Core
A private, offline journal that asks nothing of you.
One file. One password. Yours forever. No accounts, no cloud, no algorithms reading your three-in-the-morning thoughts.
Core
A minimalist journal — by removing, not by adding.
No streaks chasing you. No formatting wrestling your sentences into neatness. No AI finishing your thought before you've had it.
Comparisons
The Eternal Journal vs Obsidian for journaling.
Obsidian is for building a second brain. The Eternal Journal is for emptying the first one for a moment.
For Clinicians
For the writing you do between sessions.
Reflective writing. Letters you're not ready to send. The thought you'd rather externalise than carry into Tuesday.
The cursor will be there when you return.
Centered. Blinking. Patient.
Start Writing