Digital Product
An Adinkra-Guided Inner Work Journal
About This Journal
Adinkra symbols are a living visual language of wisdom, developed by the Akan people of Ghana. Each symbol encodes a philosophy — about memory, strength, humility, connection, transcendence — in a single, precise form. They are not decoration. They are meaning compressed into shape.
In this journal, every prompt is paired with a specific Adinkra symbol chosen by meaning, not aesthetics. Sankofa for prompts about retrieval and return. Dwennimmen for exercises in strength with humility. Gye Nyame for the moments that demand surrender. You get two ways of knowing: the symbol's ancient teaching, and the neuroscience behind why it works.
The 40 exercises use 25 distinct interaction formats — body maps, timelines, dialogue pages, comparison columns, mind maps, drawing spaces, sentence stems, emotion wheels, and more. No two pages feel the same. Each one gives you a different way to meet yourself.
The 30 Symbols
Each week is anchored by one symbol. Its meaning shapes every prompt, every exercise, every page.
Plus 22 additional symbols woven throughout daily prompts
Week-by-Week Breakdown
Week 1
Sankofa — Retrieval & Arriving
Narrative Identity
Week 2
Dwennimmen — Strength with Humility
Polyvagal Theory
Week 3
Ananse Ntontan — The Inner Web
Internal Family Systems (IFS)
Week 4
Mate Masie — Deep Listening
Affect Labeling
Week 5
Nkyinkyim — The Winding Path
Cognitive Reappraisal
Week 6
Nyansapo — Values & Purpose
Acceptance & Commitment Therapy (ACT)
Week 7
Akoma Ntoso — Connection
Attachment Theory
Week 8
Gye Nyame — Integration
Post-Traumatic Growth
10% to Ghanaian cultural preservation
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Adinkra are visual symbols created by the Akan people of Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire. Originally stamped onto mourning cloth, they evolved into a philosophical language used across architecture, pottery, metalwork, and daily life. Each symbol encodes a proverb, a teaching, or a concept — about faith, resilience, leadership, humility, connection, and the relationship between human beings and the divine. There are hundreds of Adinkra symbols, and new ones are still being created. They are a living tradition, not a closed canon. This journal selects 30 symbols whose meanings align with the psychological work of each week, honoring both the wisdom tradition and the science.