Writing.

I’ve been trying to write more regularly on here, more as a practice than anything else. Some days are much harder than others. It’s not that the act of writing is difficult, it’s not. I find it quite easy. The issue is that I have a hard time writing small.

I only have a short window in the morning to write, so most of these little daily posts are short. I’ve never been one to write short articles. I don’t often write long-form pieces. But I like to get in-depth, get a full view of the subject, and take it from as many perspectives as possible.

That takes time, something I don’t have in my regular morning window.

So for these daily posts, I write shorter pieces instead. Seth Godin is a master at this. I am not.

When I merely scratch at a subject, I feel like a fraud. As if I’m not doing the matter justice. I have dozens of ideas that I’ve never touched. I believe they deserve something more than a half-baked daily blog post by some half-awake blogger at 4 am.

Then again, maybe I’m making excuses.

In Atomic Habits, James Clear writes about boredom in any practice. And how those who succeed find a way to keep going even when the habit becomes boring. Perhaps that’s where I’m at now.

I could tackle some of the bigger-issue articles I have on the back burner, but I’m sitting here complaining instead. I’m putting too much pressure on myself to publish something daily, when the practice I want is to write daily.

Would you look at that. It seems I’ve become my own therapist.

This is why writing is important. It’s a powerful tool to help others, to spread news, and discuss and analyze important topics.

But sometimes it’s equally as effective at clearing your head and learning from your subconscious.

Colourful hand making a peace sign.

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