PTSD Daily Check-In Template: Grounding, Sleep, Distress Rating

A Daily Check-In That Works With Your Nervous System, Not Against It

The problem with most PTSD journaling templates is that they ask you to narrate. They give you prompts like “describe what you experienced today” or “write about what triggered you.” For many people with PTSD, that kind of open-ended reflection is not therapeutic. It is destabilizing.

Key Takeaways

  • A daily PTSD check-in tracks hypervigilance, avoidance, intrusive thoughts, and sleep quality to monitor symptom burden over time.
  • Brief daily check-ins catch symptom escalation early, before a full crisis develops.
  • Tracking symptom patterns alongside daily activities helps your therapist identify avoidance behaviors you may not recognize.
  • Consistent check-in data helps measure PTSD treatment progress in ways that are hard to see during difficult weeks.

This daily check-in template is structured differently. It uses rating scales, brief codes, and yes/no responses to collect meaningful data without requiring you to revisit traumatic content. Each section takes thirty to sixty seconds. The whole check-in takes two to three minutes on a difficult day and slightly longer when you want to add notes.

The structure comes from the four PTSD symptom clusters, grounding practice, and sleep monitoring because these three areas together give the clearest picture of how you are doing over time.

How to Use This Template

PTSD Symptom Cluster Symptoms to Track Tracking Method
Re-experiencing Flashbacks, nightmares, intrusive memories Frequency count per day, intensity 1-10
Avoidance Places, people, or topics you avoided List what you avoided and why
Negative cognition/mood Guilt, shame, detachment, loss of interest Rate each on 1-10 scale daily
Hyperarousal Startle response, hypervigilance, sleep difficulty Note triggers and duration of each episode
Dissociation Feeling detached, time gaps, derealization Frequency count, grounding techniques used

Complete the check-in once per day, ideally at the same time. Mid-morning or early afternoon works well for many people because you have enough of the day to report on and you are not yet in the higher-distress window that often comes in the evening. If morning is your lower-distress period, that works too. Consistency matters more than timing.

Do not aim for perfection. A partial entry on a difficult day is better than no entry. Even just completing the overall distress rating (one number) keeps the record continuous and gives you meaningful data.

For background on why each section is included and what the data reveals over time, see the PTSD symptom tracking guide and the post on trigger and response patterns.

Section 1: Morning Grounding (Complete Before Anything Else)

Before rating anything, take sixty seconds for grounding. This is not optional if you find that reviewing your symptoms tends to activate you. Grounding first creates a brief window of regulation before you begin reflecting.

A basic grounding check before the template:

  • Feet flat on the floor. Feel the contact.
  • Name three things you can see right now.
  • Take two slow breaths. Exhale longer than you inhale.

Then proceed to the check-in. After you finish, close the app or put down the journal and take one more slow breath before moving on with your day.

Section 2: Sleep

  • Total sleep hours: ___
  • Sleep quality: Poor / Fair / Good
  • Nightmares or distressing dreams: None / 1 / Multiple
  • Woke during night: Yes / No
  • Felt rested on waking: Yes / No

Sleep is consistently one of the most sensitive indicators of overall PTSD symptom burden. Hypervigilance, intrusive content in dreams, difficulty falling asleep, and waking from nightmares are all PTSD symptoms that live in the sleep window. Tracking them separately from daytime symptoms lets you see patterns that would otherwise be invisible.

Many people with PTSD find that sleep data is also the most useful thing they can share with a prescriber when discussing medication management. “My nightmares occur three or more times per week on average” is much more actionable than “I do not sleep well.”

Section 3: Intrusion Symptoms

  • Intrusive memories or thoughts today: None / 1-2 / 3-5 / More than 5
  • Flashback episodes (partial or full): None / 1 / Multiple
  • Distress intensity of intrusions (if any): 1 (mild) to 5 (severe)
  • Trigger category (optional): Sensory / Interpersonal / Situational / Temporal / Internal / Media / Unknown

Do not write out what the intrusion was. The category and intensity are enough. You are creating a record of frequency and severity over time, not a narrative of trauma content. The pattern over months is where the useful information lives.

Section 4: Avoidance

  • Did I avoid something today because of trauma-related fear or discomfort? Yes / No
  • If yes, category: Place / Person / Activity / Thought or memory / Situation / Conversation
  • Did avoidance affect something I wanted or needed to do? Yes / No

Avoidance is the symptom that perpetuates PTSD. It provides short-term relief and long-term maintenance of the fear response. Tracking it is not about judging yourself for avoiding. It is about making the invisible visible, because avoidance is, by definition, the thing you are not doing. Without a prompt, you will rarely notice it as a symptom.

Section 5: Mood and Cognitive Cluster

  • Persistent negative mood state today (guilt, shame, fear, numbness): None / Mild / Moderate / Severe
  • Feeling detached from others today: 0 = not at all, 5 = complete disconnection
  • Ability to access positive emotions today: Yes / Partial / No
  • Negative beliefs about self louder than usual: Yes / No

These symptoms are often misread as depression, and they overlap with depression significantly. Tracking them in a PTSD context helps you and your provider understand whether these are trauma-driven (and therefore addressed by trauma-focused treatment) or depressive in nature (and addressed differently).

Section 6: Hyperarousal and Reactivity

  • Hypervigilance today (scanning for threats, difficulty relaxing): 0 to 5
  • Startle response triggered today: Yes / No / How many times
  • Irritability level: 0 (none) to 5 (significant)
  • Concentration: 1 (very poor) to 5 (good)
  • Physical tension or activation (bracing, jaw clenching, shallow breathing noticed): Yes / No

Hyperarousal is often the most disabling cluster for daily functioning and the most likely to be interpreted as something other than PTSD. Tracking it consistently helps establish that this is a symptom pattern, not a personality trait or a response to current life stress alone.

Section 7: Overall Distress and Grounding Used

  • Overall distress today (0 to 10): ___
  • Did you use any grounding or coping skills today? Yes / No
  • If yes, what helped most: Breathing / Movement / Safe person contact / Sensory grounding / Distraction / Other
  • Anything to flag for next therapy session: Yes / No (save details for the session itself)

The overall distress rating is the single most important number in your log. Over weeks and months, its average and trend tell you whether you are moving in the right direction. The grounding data builds your evidence base for what actually works for you specifically, not for PTSD in general.

Weekly Summary Row

At the end of each week, take two minutes to note:

  • Average sleep hours
  • Total intrusion days (days where intrusions were 3 or above)
  • Total avoidance events
  • Average overall distress for the week
  • One sentence: what was hardest this week, and what helped

The weekly summary is what you bring to appointments. It transforms a week of individual data points into a reviewable report that takes ten seconds to scan. Your provider can see your week at a glance and you spend session time on analysis and treatment, not reconstruction.

Grounding Strategies That Work Before or After Check-In

If you find the check-in activating, these grounding techniques take under two minutes and are appropriate for use in any setting:

  • 5-4-3-2-1: Name five things you see, four you hear, three you can touch, two you smell, one you taste
  • Cold water: Running cold water over your hands or wrists for thirty seconds activates the diving reflex and slows heart rate
  • Slow exhale: Breathe in for four counts, hold for one, exhale for seven. The long exhale activates the parasympathetic nervous system
  • Feet on floor: Press your feet firmly into the floor and name five things you can see in the room around you

Use one before you start, one after if needed. This is not a luxury. It is the safety structure that makes the check-in sustainable long term.

For the PTSD Tracker app with this template built in, visit the PTSD Tracker overview page or download it on the App Store. You can also access it at presta.app.link.

This content is for informational purposes only and does not replace professional medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider before making changes to your treatment plan.