‘Less screen time, more hobbies:’ Tucson journaling group helps young adults connect

For most of her childhood, Ayzia Logan cataloged her life with glued-down scraps.

She kept receipts, ticket stubs and boarding passes that followed her from country to country as a military kid in journals to document her thoughts and memories. She drifted away from the hobby as she got into high school, but TikTok’s junk-journaling corner pulled her back in a few years ago.

When the 23-year-old moved to Tucson two years ago for a manager’s position at Capriotti’s, she said the hobby became a way to clear her mind. Still, she wanted more than a solo craft…

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