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Perfectionism Is Just Procrastination in a Blazer

June 7, 2026

dressed up, same problem

Perfectionism gets to wear a nicer outfit, but it's still procrastination.

You're not refining. You're avoiding. Refining moves the book forward. Refining sets a polish budget and stops at it. What you're doing is circling the same six paragraphs in a quiet panic and calling it craft. We're going to do the rude diagnostic that separates productive editing from stalling editing. Includes a five-minute test you can run on any current draft to see whether you're improving the book or stalling it. Spoiler: most over-editors are looping the same passages for weeks. The fix is not more polish. The fix is a cutoff.

Refining vs. tinkering

Refining Tinkering
Has a goal per pass Has no goal
Moves forward Loops on the same pages
Has a deadline Has 'whenever it's ready'
Improves clarity Replaces synonyms
Ends Keeps going

The five-minute polish test

  • Look at the page you're editing. What was wrong with it 30 minutes ago?
  • What is wrong with it now? Be honest.
  • If it's the same thing, you're tinkering, not editing.
  • If you can't name what's wrong, you're not editing, you're stalling.
  • Close the document. Open a new one. Draft the next chapter.

Refining has a goal. Tinkering has a vibe. If your edit pass doesn't have a sentence-level objective, you're stalling in a blazer.

— L.A. Walton, The Book Maven

From the Maven Catalog

  • Free eCourse — Stop Polishing Chapter One
  • Master Course — The Editing Cutoff
  • eBook — Perfectionism in a Blazer
  • Planner — Editing Pass Planner

Set the polish budget. Stop at it. The book gets finished by writers who know when to put the wrench down. Be one of them.