What is Automatic Writing?
Automatic writing—also known as psychography—is the practice of producing written text without deliberate conscious control. In spiritualism, it refers to writing produced involuntarily when the subject’s attention is ostensibly directed elsewhere. The hand moves across the page, pen to paper or fingers to keyboard, without the rational mind dictating content. The writer may be in a trance state, deeply relaxed, or fully alert yet detached from the act of writing itself.
The practice exists along a continuum: at one end, spiritualist mediums who believe spirits guide their hand to deliver messages from the deceased; at the other, surrealist artists and contemporary seekers using the technique to bypass censorship, access creative insight, or contact what they call the higher self or unconscious wisdom. In all cases, automatic writing is characterized by speed, lack of premeditation, and often, stylistic or content differences from the writer’s normal output.
Automatic writing is not stream-of-consciousness journaling. It is a deliberate act of surrender—setting an intention, entering a receptive state, and allowing something other than ordinary thought to direct the pen.
Origins & Lineage
Automatic writing as a spiritual practice was reported by Hyppolyte Taine in the preface to the third edition of his De l’intelligence, published in 1878. However, the practice surged in popularity during the height of 19th-century Spiritualism. In the 19th century, as Spiritualism captivated the Western world, a compelling method of spirit communication emerged: automatic writing, wherein mediums claimed to channel messages from the spirit world through involuntary writing, became a cornerstone of Victorian-era mediumship.
Automatic writing first became popular during the golden age of Spiritualism (late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries) by mediums attempting to contact the spirit world; automatic writing was quicker and more efficient than communication through raps or knocks. Early practitioners included Charles Linton, a 22-year-old blacksmith, who authored The Healing of the Nations (1855), a 340-page religious text written in the style of the King James Bible. William Stainton Moses (1839–1892) produced extensive automatic writings, which he compiled into works such as Spirit Teachings and Psychography. The Brazilian medium Francisco Chico Xavier, born in 1910, was one of the most prolific automatic writers in history, having produced about a hundred thousand pages of work.
In the early 20th century, automatic writing migrated from séance parlors to the avant-garde. Since 1913, André Breton, father of surrealism, experimented with automatic writing, a process that would characterize surrealist writing, seeking to let the voice of the unconscious express itself without limits or logic. By 1919, when Breton co-founded the review Littérature with Louis Aragon and Philippe Soupault, the journal contained the first example of surrealist automatic writing, Les Champs magnétiques (The Magnetic Fields). In 1924 Breton’s Manifeste du surréalisme defined Surrealism as “pure psychic automatism, by which it is intended to express…the real process of thought.”
Psychology also adopted the tool. Pierre Janet, a French psychologist, was one of the first to pioneer ideas of automatic writing in the field of psychology; in the late nineteenth century, Janet discussed automatic writing as a form of somnambulism.
How It’s Practiced
The mechanics are simple. The practitioner sits with pen and paper (or at a keyboard), often after setting an intention or asking a question. Some enter a trance through breathwork, meditation, or music; others simply still the mind and begin to write. One instruction from Breton’s manifesto: “Write quickly, without preconceived topic, unable to stop or to be tempted to read what is written.”
In spiritualist contexts, the medium may hold a pencil loosely and feel it pulled across the page by an external force. Automatic messages may take place either by the writer passively holding a pencil on a sheet of paper, or by the planchette, or by a ‘ouija board.’ The resulting text may be illegible scrawl or coherent sentences; some mediums type or write in longhand, claiming no awareness of the content until later review.
In contemporary spiritual practice, automatic writing is framed as a dialogue with the higher self, spirit guides, or the soul. The writer poses a question, stills the mind, and allows an answer to emerge on the page. Automatic writing, also known as psychography, is the practice of tapping into a deep source of wisdom within you outside of conscious awareness – also known as the Soul. Practitioners report shifts in handwriting style, vocabulary, tone, or sentence structure—markers that suggest a source beyond habitual thought.
Surrealists approached it as creative liberation. Practiced by most surrealist writers, automatic writing is about leaving free field in the brain, writing every spontaneous thought down on paper before logic takes over and rephrases it. The goal was not spirit contact but access to the unconscious mind, unfiltered by aesthetic or moral judgment.
Automatic Writing Today
Today, automatic writing is taught in spiritual development courses, breathwork circles, and creativity workshops. Teachers like Slade Roberson and authors in the channeling and intuitive arts communities offer structured methods for beginners. Practitioners use it for self-inquiry, artistic inspiration, grief processing, and decision-making clarity. It appears in somatic trauma modalities, Jungian shadow work, and New Age channeling communities.
Some contemporary practitioners claim to channel beings such as spirit guides, ancestors, or ascended masters; others frame the practice psychologically, as a way to externalize subconscious material. The technique has been adopted by novelists, poets, therapists, and spiritual seekers alike—each bringing their own interpretive framework.
Common Misconceptions
Automatic writing is not possession. In an 1890 paper on hypnotism, Morton Prince claims, “automatic writing is not a purely unconscious reflex act, but, the product of conscious individuality.” Practitioners retain agency; they choose when to begin, when to stop, and what intention to set.
It is also not proof of the supernatural. Some psychical researchers such as Thomson Jay Hudson have claimed that no spirits are involved in automatic writing and the subconscious mind is the explanation. Skeptics, including physician Charles Arthur Mercier, have long argued that the phenomenon can be explained by dissociative processes, subconscious associations, or secondary personalities. Mercier, in the British Medical Journal (1894), concluded, “there is no need nor room for the agency of spirits, and the invocation of such agency is the sign of a mind not merely unscientific, but uninformed.”
Automatic writing does not require belief in spirits, guides, or metaphysics. It works equally well as a tool for creative writers who want to short-circuit the inner critic, or as a spiritual practice for those seeking guidance. What matters is the willingness to surrender editorial control and observe what emerges.
How to Begin
Start with a dedicated journal or blank document. Choose a quiet space and a regular time of day. Before writing, set a clear intention: ask a question of your higher self, your unconscious, or simply “What do I need to know today?” Breathe deeply, soften your gaze, and allow your hand to move without stopping to read or edit.
Write for five to ten minutes without pause. If the pen stops, keep it moving—scribble, draw circles, or choose a random letter and begin a new sentence with it (a technique Breton used). Do not correct spelling or grammar. Do not judge the content. When the session ends, read what you’ve written and look for patterns, shifts in voice, or unexpected insight.
For those interested in the surrealist lineage, read André Breton’s Manifesto of Surrealism (1924) or Philippe Soupault and Breton’s The Magnetic Fields (1920). For the spiritualist approach, explore works by William Stainton Moses or contemporary teachers in the channeling tradition. For a psychological frame, investigate Pierre Janet’s writings on dissociation or Carl Jung’s active imagination techniques, which parallel automatic writing.
The practice requires no special talent—only patience, curiosity, and the willingness to meet whatever arises on the page.