-
Three Days Of Cutting Darlings (You Won’t Die)$0.00Add to cart
Three short emails. Day 1, you find them. Day 2, you eulogize them. Day 3, you cut them. The Graveyard catches them.
-
Three Days Of Embracing The Merely Good$0.00Add to cart
A short, gentle three-day course for the aesthetic perfectionist. By Day 3 you’ve finished one merely-good thing on purpose.
-
Three Days Of Feedback Triage$0.00Add to cart
A short emergency course for when feedback hurts. The 24-hour rule. The signal-vs-noise audit. The “you can ignore one note” rule.
-
Three Days Of Five Different Mouths$0.00Add to cart
Three days, three voice exercises. By Day 3 you can write five different mouths in the same scene without dialogue tags.
-
Three Days Of On-Purpose Telling$0.00Add to cart
A reverse course. Day 1: the five-second summary. Day 2: the time-jump tell. Day 3: the deliberate “we don’t need to see this” tell. Pace returns.
-
Three Days Of Pacing Surgery$0.00Add to cart
A short, sharp pacing audit. Day 1: map the drag. Day 2: cut the deadweight. Day 3: rebuild momentum.
-
Three Days Of Polite-Hero Repair$0.00Add to cart
A short sprint to add friction. Day 1: what does your hero refuse? Day 2: what do they want anyway? Day 3: rewrite one scene.
-
Three Days Of Reading It Aloud$0.00Add to cart
Three short emails. Day 1: read it aloud. Day 2: read it to someone else. Day 3: rewrite the cringe. Quick fix, real change.
-
Three Days Of Show-Tell Calibration$0.00Add to cart
Three short emails. Day 1: a slow-down case. Day 2: a summary case. Day 3: a layered case. Permanent reference at the end.
-
Three Days Of Voice Fingerprints$0.00Add to cart
Three days, three characters, three distinct mouths. By Day 3 you can spot when your cast all sound like you — and fix it on contact.
-
Three Days On A Word Diet$0.00Add to cart
Three days of cutting. Day 1: kill the modifiers. Day 2: kill the doubles. Day 3: kill the throat-clearing. Your draft is 10% leaner.
-
Three Days To Claiming Your Weird Genre$0.00Add to cart
For the cross-discipline outlier. Day 1: name it. Day 2: defend it. Day 3: build your one-line manifesto.