learn it once, finish forever
You don't have to feel inspired to finish. You have to know how.
Finishing is a teachable, repeatable skill that has almost nothing to do with talent and everything to do with structure. The writers who finish things have a quiet set of skills nobody trained them on — they figured them out in year six, usually, after writing three half-novels. We're going to skip the three half-novels and name the four finishing skills now. Pre-decision. Pace negotiation. Resentment tolerance. Closing rituals. Each one is small. Each one is practicable. Each one is the difference between a writer who finishes and a writer with a folder of beginnings.
The four finishing skills
| Skill | What it does |
|---|---|
| Pre-decision | Removes the daily 'should I write' negotiation |
| Pace negotiation | Adapts the daily word count to your real life |
| Resentment tolerance | Lets you write while disliking the draft |
| Closing rituals | Makes finishing feel possible, then real |
Practice each skill this week
- Pre-decision: Tonight, decide tomorrow's writing window. Don't revisit.
- Pace: Adjust your daily target down 30%. Sustain it.
- Resentment: Write 200 words while disliking the project. Notice you survive.
- Closing: Set a small ritual for end-of-session (a candle blown out, a tea, a tally mark).
- Repeat for one week. Notice the difference.
Finishing isn't a personality. It's four small skills you can practice in a Tuesday. Most writers don't because they're waiting to feel inspired. Don't.
— L.A. Walton, The Book Maven
From the Maven Catalog
- Free eCourse — The Finishing Skill
- Master Course — Finish Anything You Start
- eBook — Four Skills of Finishing
- Planner — The Finish-Line Planner
Pick one finishing skill. Practice it this week. Stop waiting to feel like a finisher. Build the finisher instead.