Motivation
Don’t Ever Give Up – The Advice That Will Inspire You Forever
Do you know how many hundreds of times I wanted to give up?
No, I’m not joking either. I’ve wanted to give up more than you’ve had hot dinners. So much rejection and so much failure have overwhelmed me. These two things have overwhelmed us all. This “life” thing sometimes seems like a joke.
It’s like we’ve been put in a racing car, in fifth gear, at 300km per hour and then been told to steer without any steering wheel. That’s what life is.
But there is a plan for you and for me. One day I sat down and thought about all the leaders and world champions I’ve studied. What did they do when they had to drive this racing car we call life without any steering wheel?
They got in the seat, put on the seatbelt and enjoyed the goddamn ride to the best of their ability. They ran over stuff. They hit walls. They crashed in the rain. Basically, they had fun with it.
No one’s perfect. Most of all, the people you look up to.
Don’t ever give up. Here’s why:
1. I don’t want you to
Okay so here’s the deal: I don’t want you to give up. Yes, that’s correct. I’ve worked too long and too hard to see you read every one of my blog posts and then throw in the towel because someone spoiled your lasagne.
I don’t do this because I want to inspire myself you know. You’re the reason I’m doing this. Despite what you think, I give a damn. Before you give up, send me a message on one of my social media accounts. I care and I won’t let you give up.
I’ll tell you what you don’t want to hear and I’ll give you the truth. You may not like what I have to say, but that’s because I’m not giving you cupcakes, sugar.
Suck it up because I won’t let you give up. Try me.
2. What’s the worst that can happen?
My favorite question to ask in every scary moment.
So you keep going and it’s one hell of a struggle. What’s the worst that can happen?
You try again and fail yet again?
What’s the worst that can happen? You trust in someone and then they lie to you. Happens all the time. What’s the worst that can happen?
“Most of the time the very thing you are afraid of is an illusion made up by your survival brain that is desperate to keep you safe. Safety sucks ass”
3. There’s a reason you’re here
I spent years thinking I was here to make a dollar, go on holiday, get drunk and have fun. Unfortunately, I was wrong. Life gave me a new mission once I hit the wall.
The same is true for you. You’re here for a reason and if you haven’t discovered that yet then it’s going to hit you like a flying piece of salami in the face. You are here for a reason. Life is not meaningless. There is a point to all of it even if you haven’t discovered that for yourself.
Let’s not go into those overused words of purpose and vision because you’ve heard it all before in some other self-help blog post. Let’s strip it all back to one idea: you are here for a reason. Find that reason and then don’t let go.
People will tell you you’re nuts. Screw them.
People will look at you like you’re not quite right (happens to me all the time). Screw them.
People will think you’ve lost the plot. Screw them.
People will want what you have. Help them.
People will want to join your tribe once they figure out you’re for real. Bring them in.
People want to be led. Lead them so they can find their own reason for being here.
“Giving up is for chumps. I’ve just shown you the only thing you ever need to do. There is nothing else. Everything else will follow once you discover the reason you’re here. There’s no way you can ever give up if you follow this plan”
4. It’s not only in your head
Your body tells you a lot of things. It’s not just your brain that tells you to give up; it’s your entire body. Sit up straight. Talk with confidence even when you have no reason to.
Giving up is in the way you use your body and not only about what you are thinking.
5. You can redirect the energy
Take all that energy you want to use towards giving up and divert it into inspiring others through your gift. If you sharpen knives better than anyone else then inspire people with that gift. Giving up takes energy so you may as well put that energy to good use.
6. You can try this. Tell people you want to give up (watch this)
Go and talk with the people who respect you and what you do. If you feel like giving up then tell them you are going to.
Watch this.
For the next however many hours it takes, that person you just told you are going to give up to will push you to rethink your options. Chances are they’ve been inspired by what you do and they don’t want you to give up
This occurs because when you give up on something people appreciate, it’s not good for them either. Giving up messes you up and the people that respect you. When you give up everyone loses. Your lack of willpower kills more than your own dreams.
We’re all connected in some way. Many people live their lives and are inspired by other people’s dreams. If I tried to give up right now, I reckon I would cop so much abuse that I wouldn’t be able to sleep for weeks.
People don’t want you to give up. Neither do I.
7. It’s not that bad baby
Giving up may feel like the only option, but it’s not that bad. Whatever your reasons are for giving up, it’s because you’ve convinced yourself it’s too difficult to continue on. It’s not that bad baby.
I lost my money.
Friends left me to live abroad.
Girlfriends left me.
No one followed my work.
These are the great reasons I had to give up. Did I? No freaking way. All those situations are unpleasant, but things are never as bad as you think they are. Someone else out there has way worse problems than you. Someone else is bankrupt, missing a limb, losing their home, without food or maybe even dying.
Don’t sit there and tell me you got it bad. You don’t. You haven’t been trying as hard as you think. You’ve got more in the fuel tank. Don’t ever give up.
8. You’re telling the give up story
The story about why you have to give up is being told by you. You’re the freaking narrator so stop telling crap stories. No one wants to hear a story about you giving up, including you. So, don’t tell that horrible story.
If I held a gun to your head and told you to change the story of your life, then I’m willing to bet a million bucks that you’d do it. I’m also willing to bet that you’d never cry like a baby and try and give up ever again. Now I live in Australia so I’m not going to go and buy that metaphorical gun and blow your head off because we have an agreement now. Don’t we?
Write the next chapter of your personal story. Make this chapter count. Live like you’re writing this epic novel called your life because, in fact, you are. I’m looking forward to reading it. Remember we’re all authors including you.
If you want to increase your productivity and learn some more valuable life hacks, then join my private mailing list on timdenning.net
Motivation
How to Armor Your Mind and Build Unbreakable Belief: Lessons from David Goggins
David Goggins is not interested in sugarcoating the truth. He is not interested in giving you cookie-cutter motivation, and he is certainly not interested in resting on his laurels. After retiring from the military, setting records in ultra-endurance racing, and releasing a massive bestselling book, most people would enjoy their success.
Goggins decided to become a smokejumper.
For the past few years, he has been jumping out of airplanes into the remote Canadian wilderness—places inaccessible by vehicles—to fight wildfires for $15 an hour. Why? Because the life we live is the ultimate competitor. It will find your weakness and hammer you. To survive and thrive, you cannot afford to get soft.
In a powerful conversation, David Goggins laid out exactly why he continues to seek out suffering, how he processes his childhood trauma, and the specific strategies he uses to armor his mind. Here is how you can build the kind of belief that makes you unstoppable.
Checkout this great interview with David Goggins:
The Danger of Success (And Why You Must Cap It)
Success is dangerous. More money, more fame, and more comfort can easily make you soft. Goggins believes that if you want to continue evolving, you must learn to “cap” your success.
“I have to continue to reinvent the wheel of the mind and figure out more ways for people to pull from,” Goggins explains. “To do that, I can’t just say ‘I have this resume, I’m good.’ I must cap myself so I can come back with better, more unique knowledge.”
When the noise of success gets too loud, Goggins forces himself back into the “mental lab”—which, for him, means digging holes in the ground, waking up at 5:00 AM, and freezing in the wilderness fighting fires. Growth does not happen on a podcast or during a corporate speaking gig. Growth happens at scratch.
The One-Second Decision
When you are doing something incredibly difficult—whether it is Navy SEAL Hell Week, a 240-mile ultra-marathon, or launching a difficult business—your brain will inevitably try to force you to quit. Goggins calls this the “one-second decision.”
During Hell Week, recruits are subjected to “surf torture”—sitting linked-arms in the freezing Pacific Ocean. In that environment, the brain shifts into fight-or-flight mode.
“You forget every reason why you wanted to be there,” Goggins says. “You don’t care about SEALs, you don’t care about your country, you don’t care about that gold Trident. All you want to do is go home and be warm. In that one second, most people fail.”
How do you survive that second? You have to separate your physical body from your mental state.
While his body was freezing in the water, Goggins would mentally place himself on the beach next to the instructors holding warm coffee. From that mentally “warm” place, he would think logically: Where am I going to end up if I quit? How am I going to feel tomorrow when I am warm, but I have to live with the shame of giving up?
You have to project yourself forward. You are trying to optimize for right now to stop the discomfort, but you will pay for it with decades of regret. If you can gain control of your mind for that single second, you can survive the ordeal.
Why Motivation is Useless Without a “Clean Garage”
Most people treat motivation as a permanent fix. They think that if they just watch the right video or read the right quote, they will finally have the drive to change their lives. But motivation is fleeting. You have to learn to perform at your highest level when you are the least motivated.
Many experts preach the value of discipline, but Goggins points out a massive flaw: You cannot put discipline into a cluttered mind.
Think of your mind like a garage. If your life is disorganized—full of drama, stress, and unresolved issues—your “garage” is a mess. You cannot just throw “discipline” into a messy garage and expect to find it when you need it.
“You have to be able to find all these different things in your mind,” Goggins says. “I meditate two hours every single night because I refresh and reorganize the garage… so then discipline is in there, organization is in there, and when I wake up, I’m ready to go.”
How to Build Real Confidence (Stop Pounding Your Chest)
There is a trend in the self-help world of standing in front of a mirror, pounding your chest, and shouting affirmations to build confidence. Goggins laughs at this.
True confidence is not delusional; it requires undeniable proof.
“You must build belief,” Goggins insists. “It comes from the everyday resume, the things I know I’ve accomplished, the real hard work, the real calluses on my mind.”
If you want to stop feeling sorry for yourself and build real self-esteem, you have to do the work. You build belief through the daunting tasks you put yourself through. When things get difficult, you don’t rely on a hollow affirmation; you look back at the actual suffering you have endured and say, “I have survived worse. I can knock this out.”
The Power of the Live Autopsy
To write his latest book, Never Finished, Goggins had to do something incredibly difficult: he had to return to Buffalo, New York, to confront his abusive father.
He didn’t go back looking for an apology. An apology would have just validated his trauma and given him an excuse to be a loser. He went back to understand the “Beast” that had terrorized his childhood. He learned that his father had been brutally abused by his own father.
Instead of feeling sorry for himself, Goggins performed a “live autopsy.”
“When people die, they figure out why you died in the autopsy,” he explains. “But we never do live autopsies to figure out why we’re dying while we are alive.”
By facing his past, understanding the generational trauma, and unpacking his deepest shame, Goggins was able to be reborn. If you are struggling, you must go into the archives of your life, study the things that broke you, and use that knowledge to forge yourself into something stronger.
Conclusion: Be the Standard
The world is tough, and it will try to break you. You cannot shelter yourself or your children from it indefinitely. Instead of hoping for an easy life, you must build a person who can withstand the pressure.
You have to have pride in yourself. Write your own mission statement. Decide exactly who you want to be, and hold yourself accountable to that standard every single morning. Face your demons, organize your mind, and never, ever stop fighting the one-second decision.
Entrepreneurs
Peak Performance Psychology: Secrets from the Real-Life “Wendy Rhoades”
If you have watched the hit TV show Billions, you know the character Dr. Wendy Rhoades. She is the brilliant in-house performance psychologist who helps ultra-wealthy hedge fund managers and cutthroat founders unlock extreme performance, navigate crises, and destroy their mental blocks.
But Wendy Rhoades isn’t just a fictional character trope. The Wall Street Journal recently compared the fictional Wendy to a very real person: Dr. Julie Gurner.
Dr. Gurner is one of the most sought-after executive performance coaches in the country. With a background in adult psychopathology and forensics—including a stint working in a Supermax prison—she now spends her days in the trenches with CEOs, billionaire founders, and elite operators. She helps the top 0.01% reach the next level psychologically.
In a recent interview, Dr. Gurner shared the exact traits, mindsets, and peak performance psychology strategies that separate the ultra-successful from everyone else. Here is how you can apply them to your own life.
1. The Defining Trait of the Top 0.01%: Audacity
When looking at the ultra-successful, one trait stands out above the rest: Audacity.
Audacity is the refusal to follow the “imaginary rules” that govern most people’s lives. Society teaches us certain boundaries: you cannot apply for that job unless you have exactly five years of experience, a small startup cannot pitch a major bank, or you do not belong in certain rooms because of your background.
According to Dr. Gurner, the top 0.01% operate with an almost complete unawareness of these artificial limits.
“They don’t follow the rules that everyone else seems to follow that are actually very artificial,” Gurner explains. “That audacity to go for these larger things… is really how they skip steps that everyone else is still trudging through. We’re all going on the crowded path, and they just find this little dirt road to get to outcomes we are eight years away from.”
How to Apply It: Adopt the disposition of “What if it goes right?” instead of “What if it goes wrong?” We chronically overestimate the true risk of failure. In reality, most failures are temporary and quickly forgotten by the public. Take the side path. Shoot the uncomfortably large shot.
2. The Repetitive Reflex: Stop Trying to Fix Your Weaknesses
There is a common misconception (the halo effect) that high performers are exceptional at everything. In reality, they are usually only great at one or two things—but they lean into those strengths relentlessly.
Dr. Gurner points to Elon Musk as a public example. Musk is a visionary company builder and resource gatherer, but he famously relies on operators like Gwynne Shotwell at SpaceX to handle the granular day-to-day operations, NASA contracts, and internal management.
“If you start as above-average on something and put force behind it, the separation between you and everyone else is dramatic,” Gurner notes. “But if you focus all your time on the things you are below average at, maybe you’ll bring them up to average. That’s not where you get escape velocity.”
How to Apply It: Identify your unique, outlier strengths. Double down on them. Stop judging yourself for the things you are bad at, and either delegate them, outsource them, or partner with someone who thrives in those areas (the “spreadsheet person”).
3. Stop Suppressing Negative Emotion: Use It as Fuel
The modern wellness world is currently obsessed with stoicism—the idea that you should remain perfectly tempered, suppress extreme emotions, and remain unaffected by the world.
Dr. Gurner pushes back hard against this, arguing that suppressing intense emotion is a massive waste of energy.
“If you have anger or rage, why would you suppress that?” she asks. “You are killing a source of energy that you could channel into something absolutely phenomenal. There are so many wonderful companies and careers built on spite, anger, and ‘I’m going to show you’ energy.”
Humans are meant to experience a full spectrum of emotions. If you have been wronged, you can choose to let that anger destroy you, or you can use it to work 80-hour weeks, build an empire, and make your life phenomenal.
How to Apply It: Do not let negative emotions turn you into a toxic person to those around you, but absolutely use the internal fire of a perceived slight or past failure to fuel your daily actions.
4. Be Quirky, Not Humble
If you want to reach the highest levels of success, “be humble” is often terrible advice.
Humility is frequently confused with modesty or self-deprecation. If you constantly devalue your contributions, the people who desperately need your specific skills will never find you. Knowing what you are great at, and proudly sharing it with the world, does not make you arrogant—it makes you useful.
Furthermore, do not sand down your edges to fit into a corporate mold.
“Everyone is pushing toward conformity, and it is the wrong path,” Gurner says. “If you push to fit in with everyone else, and then you’re mad that your outcomes aren’t different, there’s a reason for that. We remember people because of their quirks.”
How to Apply It: Own what you are great at loudly. Lean into your strange hobbies and unique personality traits. The friction of your “weirdness” is exactly what makes you memorable and separates you from the conformist pack.
5. Reframe Obstacles as Challenges
At the end of the day, Dr. Gurner says her main job as a psychologist is simply to help high-achievers get out of their own way. We all know what the optimal decisions in our lives are, but we invent excuses and barriers to avoid doing the hard work.
The simplest, most scalable tool to fix this is reframing.
“How you frame everything is how you approach it,” Gurner explains. “When you see an obstacle or a problem, reframe it into a challenge. Think, ‘How could I productively think about this that is equally true?’ We get so tunneled in that we don’t see other ways of thinking about the same challenge that could get us amped up to tackle it.”
The Bottom Line: Don’t Ignore the Haunting Agitation
Many people walk around with “haunting agitation”—a nagging voice whispering that they could be doing more, living bigger, and fulfilling a dream they abandoned long ago.
Do not let that whisper become a scream of regret later in life.
The difference between those who achieve outlier success and those who don’t is simply a willingness to make sacrifices. Map out the life you want, figure out exactly what it costs (both financially and in terms of effort), and have the audacity to go get it.
Checkout this incredible interview with Dr Julie Gurner
Motivation
How to Overcome Procrastination on Your Side Hustle (The Enjoyment Framework)
It is a common and frustrating paradox for ambitious individuals: you crush your tasks at your 9-to-5, you take flawless care of your family, and you never miss a deadline when putting together a presentation for your boss. But the moment you sit down to work on your own side hustle, you freeze.
You find yourself doom-scrolling, organizing your desk for the fifth time, or staring blankly at your notes.
If you are procrastinating on the exact project that is supposed to give you financial freedom, you might think you suffer from a “fear of success” or a “fear of failure.” But a deeper look reveals that the root cause is much simpler, and much more manageable.
Here is how to get to the root of your procrastination and dissolve it completely.
The “Importance” Trap: Why Your Side Hustle Feels Terrible
Let’s say your side hustle is launching a personal brand—specifically, recording your first series of YouTube videos or a podcast.
When you put together a slide deck or record a training video for your employer, there is a lightness to it. You just do the work. But when you sit down in front of the camera for your own business, the internal narrative shifts drastically.
Suddenly, this isn’t just a video. This is the vehicle that will save you from the corporate grind. This is what will secure your children’s future. This is the ultimate test of your self-worth. It is so important that it becomes terrifying.
When you place world-saving, life-altering importance on a simple task, you introduce massive friction. You create a scenario where:
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Starting feels overwhelming.
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Your tolerance for frustration plummets.
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Every time you stutter or mess up the lighting, it feels like a catastrophic roadblock.
You are demanding perfection out of the gate. And because perfection is impossible, your brain chooses procrastination as a defense mechanism to avoid the inevitable pain of falling short.
The Reality Check: You Are a Terrible Boss to Yourself
If you want to work for yourself, you have to be a good boss to yourself.
Right now, you are operating under the yoke of a relentless perfectionist. If you had a real-life manager who stood over your shoulder, demanding that every single word you speak be flawless, while reminding you that your entire family’s future depends on this one recording, you would hate your job. You would quit.
By demanding perfection, you are actively ensuring that your side hustle remains unlaunched. You are trading the discomfort of a 9-to-5 for the paralysis of a tyrannical inner critic.
How to Overcome Procrastination (Step-by-Step)
To break this cycle, you must fundamentally change your metric for success. Here is the step-by-step method to get your side hustle off the ground.
1. Drop the “Perfect” for the “Fun”
If you tried to doom-scroll perfectly, you would hate doom-scrolling. If you tried to play the guitar flawlessly every time you picked it up, you would never play. The key to consistency is a lack of friction. Your only requirement when sitting down to work on your project should be to have fun.
2. Make Enjoyment the Primary Metric
When you optimize for enjoyment, the quality of your work actually increases. A raw, authentic video recorded with genuine enthusiasm will connect with an audience far better than a stiff, over-scripted, heavily edited video recorded through gritted teeth. Even if the “fun” version is technically flawed, you will have the energy to go back and improve your skills later because you are actually enjoying the process.
3. Apply the 10% Rule
If you are feeling the pressure mount, pause and ask yourself: “How can I enjoy this exact moment 10% more?”
Maybe it means throwing away the script and just talking off the cuff, playing your favorite music before you hit record, or just appreciating the fact that you have the opportunity to build something for yourself.
4. The 7-Day Challenge
For the next week, implement this specific framework when you sit down to work on your side hustle:
| Priority Level | Your Objective | What to Do if You Fail |
| Priority 1 | Enjoy yourself and the process. | If you are not enjoying it, stop immediately. Figure out how to make it fun before continuing. |
| Priority 2 | Get the work done. | If the work is getting done but it feels like a painful grind, refer back to Priority 1. |
Final Thoughts on Procrastination
Procrastination is not a sign that you are lazy, and it does not mean your idea is doomed. It is simply a signal that the pressure you are putting on yourself has made the task too painful to begin.
Stop demanding that your side hustle be perfect. Stop demanding that it saves your life right this second. Make your work lovely to do, focus on having fun, and the procrastination will naturally dissolve.
Motivation
How to Think More Clearly Than 99% of People
Information is cheap. Facts, statistics, frameworks, and quotes are everywhere—you can pull up endless data online in seconds. But here is the hard truth: information doesn’t change you, and it doesn’t make you smarter. It just clogs your brain with noise until you can no longer think straight.
Your brain does not magically upgrade raw data into understanding. After generating over $500 million in sales for brands like Shopify and Canva, I learned that the top 1% of high-achievers share a specific process for cutting through the noise. They do not just consume; they process. They understand that to think better than 99% of people, you have to think on paper.
To master this, you first need to understand the Cycle of Learning:
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Information: Raw data.
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Knowledge: Connecting facts and giving them context.
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Understanding: Taking a concept apart and rebuilding it.
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Intelligence: Your capacity to reason and problem-solve.
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Wisdom: Knowing what to do with what you know and applying it in real life.
Wisdom isn’t reserved for old age; it is achievable right now through application. When you interact with a piece of paper, you move from mere information to intelligence by externalizing your thoughts.
Here are the six principles of thinking on paper that will elevate your mind.
1. Acknowledge Your Brain’s 4-Thought Limit
Back in the 1950s, a famous study suggested our working memory could hold seven items at once. Modern research has corrected that: your brain can only juggle a maximum of four things at a time.
When you try to solve a complex problem in your head, your thoughts might feel brilliant, but your brain is essentially just highlighting the one sentence it can currently see. By writing, you externalize those four items onto the page, freeing up your working memory to process and reason further. The moment you write your thoughts down, you will spot the invisible holes in your logic.
The Fix: Next time you are stuck, grab a pen and externalize the variables your brain is juggling. The brilliant idea might collapse on paper, but that collapse is the thinking process.
2. Draw to Double Your Retention
A 2016 study on the “Drawing Effect” revealed that people who drew a simple picture of a concept recalled nearly double the information compared to those who just wrote the word down.
Drawing forces your brain to engage three types of processing simultaneously, creating a much richer memory trace:
| Processing Type | What It Does |
| Semantic | You think about the actual meaning of what you are drawing. |
| Visual | You create a mental picture of the concept. |
| Motor | You physically move your hand to create the image. |
The Fix: When learning a new framework, draw it out. Even if it is just circles, boxes, and arrows. For example, draw your business structure to see exactly where you are strong and where you are weak.
3. Use Handwriting to Force Friction
In 2014, the “Pen is Mightier Than the Keyboard” study highlighted a fascinating phenomenon: typists produce way more words, but hand-writers learn more. Why? Because handwriting is slow.
If writing feels hard, it means your brain has stopped skating on the surface and started tunneling into meaning. Typing is too easy; you can transcribe verbatim without thinking. Handwriting creates a desirable difficulty. Because you physically cannot keep up with the speaker, you are forced to compress and process the information into your own words.
The Fix: Carry a physical notebook. Do not transcribe word-for-word. Force yourself to compress what you hear into core concepts.
4. Synthesize, Don’t Just Transcribe
Writing doesn’t help you learn just because you are taking notes; it helps because it forces a transformation of knowledge. Someone who rewrites a concept in their own words learns exponentially more than someone who simply records data.
This maps perfectly to Kolb’s Learning Cycle:
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Concrete Experience: Living the moment (touching a hot stove).
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Reflective Observation: Thinking about what happened.
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Abstract Conceptualization: Connecting the dots (“Hot things burn”).
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Active Experimentation: Testing the theory.
Writing fulfills the middle two steps, making it an act of application rather than documentation. This is why you forget most self-help books you read—you consume without synthesizing.
The Fix: After every learning session, write a one-page summary. Don’t just list facts; explain what you are going to do differently, and pick one concept to apply today.
5. Take Action to Generate Clarity
There is a field of study called distributed cognition, which proves that thinking doesn’t happen in the brain alone. It happens in a system that includes your environment, your tools, and the representations you create.
Writer’s block happens because you try to analyze before you act. But research into high-stakes professions (like crisis teams and air traffic controllers) shows that people act first, and understand their analysis retroactively. Writing generates clarity; you do not need clarity to start writing.
The Fix: Stop waiting for the perfect idea. If you need a great marketing hook, write 10 tragically terrible ones first. Let your brain react to the bad ideas on the page—that feedback loop will inevitably spawn the 11th, perfect idea.
6. Write Privately to Expose the Truth
We rarely question our own thoughts. If a thought is in our head, we assume it is true. Writing creates metacognition (the ability to think about your thinking) by putting cognitive distance between you and your ideas.
Furthermore, researcher James Pennebaker found that people who wrote privately about emotional or chaotic experiences for just 15 minutes a day showed improved immune function, clearer thinking, and better working memory.
If you only ever write polished content for public consumption or social media, your thinking will remain shallow. You are performing instead of processing.
The Fix: Start a daily writing practice that no one will ever see. Write for 10 minutes every morning about confusing situations, assumptions, or chaotic thoughts. Give yourself permission to be messy and contradict yourself. When you review it, you will expose your blind spots and uncover your best thinking.
Joanna Wiebe has a great breakdown on this:
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