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⚡ Let’s Simplify This
Sometimes we make writing a book feel more complicated than it needs to be. We tell ourselves we need more time. More discipline. A better routine. But what if it’s not that? What if it’s this: You’re trying to move forward without knowing exactly where you’re going. So you write a scene… then question it. You outline… then change it. You get excited… then lose momentum halfway through. And suddenly weeks pass, and the book feels like it hasn’t really moved. Not because you didn’t try. But because you didn’t have something steady to follow. Let me give you an example. Imagine sitting down to write and instead of wondering, “Is this the right next step?” You already know. You’ve mapped the direction. You understand what your story is building toward. And when you get stuck, you’re not alone trying to figure it out… You have guidance. You have feedback. You have people walking the same path, hitting the same walls, and moving through them. Now compare that to doing it alone. Guessing. Restarting. Second-guessing every decision. That’s the difference. So let’s simplify it: If you had: A) A clear structure B) Weekly guidance C) People walking the same path Would your book be further along right now? Be honest with yourself 👇 If the answer is yes… Then it’s not about trying harder. It’s about choosing a different way to move forward. And that’s something we can talk about.
⚡ Let’s Simplify This
🌿 Clarity Creates Speed
As I have written my books, I’ve learned the power of having clarity behind your words. It’s not that you need to write faster. What it comes down to is that you need to hesitate less. Because most of the time, it’s not the writing that slows you down. It’s that pause before it. 💥 That’s why I talk about being consistently so frequently! 💥 That moment where you’re hovering over the keyboard thinking: “Is this the right direction?” “Does this even fit?” “Am I messing this up?” Instead of moving forward… You reread. You tweak. You question. Or you step away entirely, telling yourself you’ll come back when it feels clearer. And then when you do come back… It takes time just to find your place again. That’s where the real time is lost. It’s that hesitation that can be the killer for your book. 📕 The second-guessing and trying to feel certain before you move. But clarity doesn’t come from waiting. It comes from deciding what your story is actually moving toward and trusting that enough to keep going. 💥 That’s the shift. 💥 That’s where speed is created. Not by pushing harder, but by knowing where you’re going. So tell me this: Where do you hesitate the most right now in your book? 📕 The beginning? The middle? A specific scene? A character choice? That hesitation point… That’s your clarity gap. And once you see it clearly, you can finally move through it instead of around it. Share it in the comments and let's grow!
🌿 Clarity Creates Speed
🛠️ Stop Writing in Circles
There’s a moment in every book where it starts to feel like you’re moving but not actually getting anywhere. ✍️ You’re writing chapters. ✍️ Scenes are happening. ✍️ Words are filling the page. And yet… something feels off. Like each piece exists on its own island. 🏝️ If your chapters feel disconnected, this isn’t because you’re a bad writer. 📝 It’s because your through-line isn’t locked in. Story First means this: 💥 Every chapter… 💥 Every scene… 💥 Every moment… …is in conversation with the same core shift. Not just “what happens next”, but what is this story transforming? Let me show you what this looks like: Example 1 (surface vs. depth): On the surface: A girl travels across kingdoms to find others like her. Underneath: She learns that trust, not isolation, is what brings people together. Now every chapter has a job: ❓ Does this moment challenge her ability to trust? ❓ Or push her deeper into isolation? If not, then it doesn’t belong. Here’s another example. Example 2: On the surface: A man rebuilds his life after failure. Underneath: He learns that his worth isn’t tied to achievement. Now the story sharpens: ☑️ Every scene either reinforces his old belief… ☑️ Or cracks it open. When this piece clicks, something shifts: 🛑 You stop guessing what to write next. 🛑 You stop restarting. 🛑 You stop writing in circles. ⭕️ Because now, you’re following a path. 👉 So here’s where I want you to look: What is your story really about underneath the surface? This isn’t the plot, or the scenes. It’s the shift. Drop it below if you’re ready to map it out 👇
🛠️ Stop Writing in Circles
✨ You Don’t Need More Ideas
You need to trust the one you already have. Many writers tend to run up to self-judgement, thinking that their story isn’t “Good Enough” or that they could make it better. This turns into a delay in finishing because they keep searching for that “better idea.” Focus on getting it onto paper. 📄 Don’t second guess and then take the time to edit yourself several times. Think of the Story First method. Story First says: 👉 Stay. Go deeper. What idea have you been circling but not committing to? Share it in the comments and let’s help one another!
✨ You Don’t Need More Ideas
✨ Your Book Doesn’t Need Perfect Conditions
Hands up to all the ones saying the TIME IS NOT READY! I’ve been there. But guess what?! That doesn’t finish the book. 📕 Many authors have chaotic lives and they still get their books complete. What it needs is consistency. Most writers wait for: 😵‍💫More time 😵‍💫More clarity 😵‍💫More energy 📚But books are built in imperfect conditions. 📚 When IS the time? ⏰ Why not get consistent with time dedicated to your book? 📖 If you feel you don’t have time, spend at least 15 minutes on your book daily. Then think, what can you realistically commit to this week? Remember that the time given to your book is what moves it forward.
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✨ Your Book Doesn’t Need Perfect Conditions
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