Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Emily Winerock's avatar

I've done the 750-words-a-day challenge and found that most of what I wrote didn't turn out to be good or useful. It was great for feeling disciplined and virtuous, but it didn't actually help me get closer to my writing goals. Instead, for me, co-working has been the most transformative method for making writing progress -- both in person and virtually. I've had marvelous success with in-person co-working retreats, but mostly I do co-working as a member of Flow Club, which hosts virtual shorter increment sessions (90-minute and 2-hour sessions work best for me). The combination of accountability and the need to clear my schedule for a known increment of time seems to matter more than writing daily for me. I also try to book conference travel so that I arrive a day early, so that if needed, I have time set aside to tweak my paper or slides without pulling an all-nighter. And if I don't need it, I get to take myself to a nice restaurant and read something fun. Mostly though, I think the key is try lots of different strategies and methods so you can find what works best for you!

Expand full comment
The Intuitive Storyteller's avatar

Really enjoyed this, Jenn! I have drank that kool aid myself, setting an unrealistic daily rule and dropping off shortly after. It caused me to feel uncommitted, when the truth is, I felt boxed in by uninspired rule following (you know how feral I am). This article inspired me to just write as the inspiration flows, but be intentional about actually writing, not just dreaming about it :) Thank you!

Expand full comment
4 more comments...

No posts