Most writers assume writing feels hard because theyāre undisciplined.
That they lack consistency.
That they just need to ātry harderā or be more motivated.
But in my experience, thatās rarely the real reason.
Writing becomes hard because youāre carrying things into the work.
Youāre holding:
š© emotional weight from the story itself
š© self-doubt about whether your voice is āenoughā
š© old stories about being seen or judged
š© the pressure to get it right the first time
š© the fear of opening something you donāt know how to close
Thatās a lot to ask of a blank page. š
And yet, most writing advice only talks about structure, outlines, word counts, and productivity, without ever acknowledging the human sitting at the desk. š§āāļø
Thatās why I donāt just teach structure.
I work with the writer behind the words.
Because when you support the nervous system, the emotions, and the inner dialogue, the writing starts to move again, naturally.
Not forcefully.
Not through shame or hustle.
Support doesnāt mean youāre failing.
It doesnāt mean youāre ābad at writing.ā
It doesnāt mean youāve fallen behind.
ā¤ļø It means youāre honest about what this process actually asks of you.
ā¤ļø It means you care enough about your story to hold it with intention.
ā¤ļø It means youāre serious about finishing, not just starting.
And you donāt have to do that alone.
If youāve been thinking, āI donāt want to carry this by myself anymore,āmessage me SUPPORT or write it in the comments and weāll talk about what kind of guidance would actually serve you.
You deserve to feel supported while you write. āļø