Discussion about this post

User's avatar
The Heart of Everything's avatar

When I’m stuck, I take my dog for a walk. I let my mind wander. It’s unfocused thought, giving my brain a bit more space to experiment without a goal. Writing, then, is like learning to be a sponge that never gets wrung out, always observing, absorbing, thinking.

And when the rough blob of an idea flits into my mind, I capture it—not with paper and quill, like the more romantic figures of the past, but with a note on my phone or an email to myself. Sometimes the idea turns out to be a dud. Other times, it takes some time to mature, then collides with another rough blob of an idea months later.

It works. And I swear by it, because I’ve learned the hard way that a forced idea, willed into existence while glowering at a blank page, will almost always end up being a dead rabbit that never had a chance.

This strikes me as something AI can't do--it can force ideas, but as Brian says, you'll end up with a dead rabbit?

Expand full comment
Michael Scott Shappe's avatar

I occasionally will "cop out" by writing a "three random things" post--three short subjects on things that caught my attention and that I feel I could write a few grafs about, but not expound on.

Except that, so far, 3 times out of 5, I start writing what's intended to be the first random thing, and find that once I've started I wind up with a complete article just about that subject, after all. Of the remaining 2 in 5, 1 in 5, it's the second "random thing" that turns long, and bumps out the first and third. Only that last chance in 5 actually winds up being a Three Random Things post.

In my day job as a software engineer, I allow myself a lot of fallow time. When I worked in an office, this was perilous, because it often looked like I was not actually working. If you're not actually typing code, you're not working, right? I was fortunate in that some bosses believed in and understood me when I told them my brain needs to set problems into the background and do other things sometimes, mainly because they saw that I not only produced good results but did so on time. Becoming a full-time remote worker (which I did long before the pandemic) broke me free from caring about who was looking over my shoulder and made this process more powerful.

It does mean that I spend a chunk of my day doomscrolling, but the work gets done, well, and on time. That's all that should matter.

Expand full comment
2 more comments...

No posts