the mental draft is sabotage
You've written this blog post nineteen times in your head and zero times in a document.
That's not preparation. That's procrastination wearing a thinking face. Mental drafting feels productive because it engages the same brain regions as planning, but it never ships anything. The post stays in your head, polishing itself indefinitely, never getting the messy bath of becoming actual prose. We talk about why mental drafting kills blog cadence, the 22-minute publish window, and the boring rule that turns hobby bloggers into ones with traffic. Spoiler: open the document first. Always.
Mental drafting vs. real drafting
| Mental drafting | Real drafting |
|---|---|
| Feels productive | Feels uncomfortable |
| Polishes endlessly | Finishes ugly |
| Stays in your head | Lives on your blog |
| No reader feedback loop | Real data on what works |
The 22-minute publish window
- Open a document. Empty.
- Set a 22-minute timer.
- Write the post. Bad is fine.
- Add a title, a meta description, a category.
- Publish or schedule. Now.
- Edit later if it bothers you. Probably won't.
Mental drafting feels like preparation. It is, in fact, procrastination wearing a thinking face. The fix is rude: open the document first.
— L.A. Walton, The Book Maven
From the Maven Catalog
- Master Course — Blog Cadence
- eBook — Stop Drafting in Your Head
- Planner — The 12-Month Blog Planner
- Toolkit — Blogger's Toolkit
Open the document first. Twenty-two minutes. Bad is fine. Publish. The mental version was always going to be perfect. The real one is going to be read.