The Discipline to Write Daily

Two female joggers

My friend, Frank McMahon, asked me how I was able to write a blog post every day. The mechanics of writing daily are one thing. But it’s the discipline that really catches most people. Let’s talk about the discipline required to write daily.

It Requires a Stillness

To write daily, you have to find a moment of stillness where you can put down your thoughts. Parents know that this is difficult. Busy people know that it’s difficult. And yet, there are ways to find stillness. We simply must build the desire to find that time into our daily habits. Never look for a time that’s ideal. Look for the time you can grab. Right now, I’m doing this post in the morning before the kids are awake. I sometimes sneak time at night. Other times, I can write in between projects at work. I hunt for the stillness.

It Requires a Practice Mind

Some writers are afraid that their output won’t be good. If you can accept that you’re write daily, and frequently, then you’ll know that you’re practicing. Runners know this. They have bad runs and they have great runs, and along the way these add up to improvements in their personal records. My friend, Laura in Altanta, contacts me once every week or two to let me know she’s pushed past another personal record in her running. She also tells me when she’s had a bad series of runs in a row. It’s all part of it.

The same is true with writing. Not everything I write is my best work. But I release it when it seems done, and I try again for the next piece. By the way, what I think of my writing is rarely what you think. The pieces I hate, or the pieces that come out really fast and seem obvious are the ones you praise. The ones I work hard on, I get a few comments and they float under the bridge.

Writing Daily Requires a Curiosity

I write all the time, every day. The thing is, I write quite often in my head, and only sometimes into a keyboard or onto paper. That’s how it is when you’re a writer. You’re talking to a friend and they say something with an interesting turn of phrase, and you forget everything else they’re saying. You hear one thing though someone said something else and it sets you off down the rabbit hole. Alice, of Wonderland fame, was curious. There would be no book were she not such a nosy investigator of things that weren’t her business.

Writing Daily Requires Framing

Things go so much better when you have a writing frame of some kind. That way, you know the rough shape of what you’re going to produce. If you’re writing fiction, you know to keep the plot and the characters moving along. If you’re writing haiku, you know to keep it brief. If you’re writing couplets, well, you get the point. I can face the keyboard with confidence because I know that I’m going to produce a certain kind of piece. It will be part story, part explanation, and part instruction. It will end (hopefully) with you feeling interested in adapting and taking the idea to execute on your own.

I do that by framing.

Writing Daily Requires a Fall-Forward Mentality

On the day you miss a post, don’t throw it all away. Just write two the next time you have a moment. Start writing in advance of the day. Start preparing for the bumps in the road. And then, you’ll have quite a lot of stretch in your world, so that you can still write daily, even when you miss a day (our little secret).

Writing Daily Requires Confidence

Finally, accept that you’re a writer. You might not be the best writer. You’re a writer, and you’re one of us (writers). Be that. Don’t say that you’re not a writer because you haven’t written a book. I’ve met several people who aren’t writers who have written books. I have met several people who aren’t writers who have written bestsellers. You’re a writer because you write. You’re a writer when you write. Writing is a verb, the way love is a verb. If you’re not actively writing (even when we write in our head), you’re not writing. So, write.

Right?

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  • http://www.woodylewis.com Woody Lewis

    Absolutely. I’m at work on a novel, have been for years. Since I got my MFA in Jan ’07, I think there have been a total of two weeks’ worth of days when I haven’t written something, at least a line or two, or edited. No secret, it takes repetition, lots of it, to succeed.

  • http://bitstrategist.wordpress.com bitstrategist

    Great post and insightful comment stream as well, in particular the comments about quality vs. quantity, self-criticism, and your clarification that it’s about *writing* daily (not necessarily publishing daily).

    Writers aren’t born with some magical ability. They work at their craft. A lot. If some studies about expertise are to be believed, you need about 10,000 hours of doing something before you’re really, really good at it. If you want to be a good writer, that’s a whole lotta words, and writing every day will sure get you there faster. ;-)

    Thanks for writing all that you do!

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      Oh those 10k hours. I’ve done my time with writing. I really have. : )

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      Oh those 10k hours. I’ve done my time with writing. I really have. : )

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      Oh those 10k hours. I’ve done my time with writing. I really have. : )

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      Oh those 10k hours. I’ve done my time with writing. I really have. : )

  • http://beasuccessfulentrepreneur.com Glenn

    Chris Thanks so much for this great post!
    Having been asked and paid to help other people develop blogs, articles and information products, many times I get an almost unbelievable response when I tell them the number one key to developing their blog is consistency and having the discipline to that consistency no matter what. One technique I have used to help get on that path of writing everyday is to identify a series of articles on a more extensive topic, then write on that topic everyday, while your mind is on a common theme, link to the other posts and background outside research you have. Abit similar I think to your idea of framing…

  • http://twitter.com/AmandaMFries Amanda Fries

    Thanks for the encouraging blog! Great post!

  • http://twitter.com/DanDanTheArtMan Dan Absalonson

    Great post. I’ve been trying to get myself back in the groove of writing everyday with NaNoWriMo approaching, and I’ve just been thinking – I should have been doing this everyday since last years NaNo! It goes so much better for me to crank out a story when I’m writing it day after day, I don’t have to get myself back into the world, I’ve been in it all day, now I just have a chance to write more of it down and get it out of my head. Thanks for this awesome post.

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      Do or do not. There is no try. – Yoda.

      This is your time, Dan. This time, you don’t allow yourself to fall back. You’re a writer.

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      Do or do not. There is no try. – Yoda.

      This is your time, Dan. This time, you don’t allow yourself to fall back. You’re a writer.

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      Do or do not. There is no try. – Yoda.

      This is your time, Dan. This time, you don’t allow yourself to fall back. You’re a writer.

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      Do or do not. There is no try. – Yoda.

      This is your time, Dan. This time, you don’t allow yourself to fall back. You’re a writer.

  • http://twitter.com/DanDanTheArtMan Dan Absalonson

    Great post. I’ve been trying to get myself back in the groove of writing everyday with NaNoWriMo approaching, and I’ve just been thinking – I should have been doing this everyday since last years NaNo! It goes so much better for me to crank out a story when I’m writing it day after day, I don’t have to get myself back into the world, I’ve been in it all day, now I just have a chance to write more of it down and get it out of my head. Thanks for this awesome post.

  • http://twitter.com/susansmithdaily Susan Smith

    I absolutely agree it is a discipline. I have been writing every morning for awhile now and it is really tough some days. I could not get inspired this morning so I am trying a change of scenery and hoping it helps. I may not be the best writer but I love to share my stories and I try to do that every day I can.Thank you for your motivation and words.

  • http://www.hannahsharvest.com Hannahmarcotti

    One of the things I work with Mother’s on is finding their stillness and I love how you talked about that in terms of writing.

    And this “You’re a writer when you write. Writing is a verb, the way love is a verb. If you’re not actively writing (even when we write in our head), you’re not writing. So, write.”

    Made my day. And so I write…

  • http://www.hannahsharvest.com Hannahmarcotti

    One of the things I work with Mother’s on is finding their stillness and I love how you talked about that in terms of writing.

    And this “You’re a writer when you write. Writing is a verb, the way love is a verb. If you’re not actively writing (even when we write in our head), you’re not writing. So, write.”

    Made my day. And so I write…

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      I’m happy you’re there to help, Hannah.

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      I’m happy you’re there to help, Hannah.

  • http://ariwriter.com Ari Herzog

    Curious, Chris… Do you write every day because *YOU* want to write, or do you write because your community expects it?

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      I write because I’m a writer. : )

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      I write because I’m a writer. : )

  • mindworksrookie

    Just wrote something on my paper :) !

  • http://biancafiloteo.com Bianca Filoteo

    Thanks for the great post, Chris! I don’t write as much on my blog as I want to, but I have been writing everyday since June on a separate notebook called Morning Pages, which is something Julia Cameron encourages you to do in her books like “The Artist’s Way”. I’ve finally developed a habit of writing 3 pages every morning and I love it! It’s party of my daily life now – something I can’t not do. Now I just need to work on writing more often on my blog! I probably haven’t done so for the reason you mentioned on your post: fear that the output won’t be any good.

  • http://www.likeawarmcupofcoffee.com Sarahmae

    I love this post. Extremely encouraging and inspiring – Thank you so much!

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Reign-Angelina/100000967012328 Reign Angelina

    I have read so many of your posts and found them so useful, that I almost feel like I know you. :-)
    Ditto tp Sarahmae’s comment.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Reign-Angelina/100000967012328 Reign Angelina

    I have read so many of your posts and found them so useful, that I almost feel like I know you. :-)
    Ditto tp Sarahmae’s comment.

  • http://twitter.com/JimConrad Jim Conrad

    It also seems to be apparent that writing consistantly for a week, month, or even a year may not produce results. Writing, or adding content of any kind, needs to be a part of one’s life. Look at when you started: March 2004.

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      I started in 1998 on blogs. I started in 1983 on paper. : )

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      I started in 1998 on blogs. I started in 1983 on paper. : )

  • http://twitter.com/JimConrad Jim Conrad

    It also seems to be apparent that writing consistantly for a week, month, or even a year may not produce results. Writing, or adding content of any kind, needs to be a part of one’s life. Look at when you started: March 2004.

  • http://twitter.com/cultureguru Deanna Shoss

    The other thing I find is when the words come to me, I have to write them down right away–that’s why you’ll find napkins, backs of envelopes, margins of agendas, etc., with the perfect blog post, but I’ve learned if I don’t right it down when the flow is coming, It won’t come out later when I’m ready to write. Good news is that when I sit down to the computer, if I can read my handwriting, the post is usually almost done!

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      That’s a great thing, Deanna. That’s how Hemingway did it. : )

    • http://chrisbrogan.com Chris Brogan

      That’s a great thing, Deanna. That’s how Hemingway did it. : )

  • http://twitter.com/ClarabelaMedia Clara Mathews

    This is great advice for me.

    I love this part: “You’re a writer because you write. You’re a writer when you write. Writing is a verb, the way love is a verb. If you’re not actively writing (even when we write in our head), you’re not writing. So, write”

    Writing is is verb, it requires action, not intention.

  • http://twitter.com/ClarabelaMedia Clara Mathews

    This is great advice for me.

    I love this part: “You’re a writer because you write. You’re a writer when you write. Writing is a verb, the way love is a verb. If you’re not actively writing (even when we write in our head), you’re not writing. So, write”

    Writing is is verb, it requires action, not intention.

  • http://withthekids.wordpress.com/ April Karli

    The part about stillness reveals to me that I haven’t had enough stillness in the last few weeks, much less daily. Stillness doesn’t just come, you make space for it. My goal isn’t to write daily, just more often and more regularly. I think these disciplines can be applied anyway.

  • http://workathomehomeschoolingmom.com/2010/09/the-power-of-sharing-your-story/ Shannon (Living Life at Home)

    I love to hear that you write a lot in your head. I find myself doing the same thing. So much of writing happens as an extension of thought before it ever makes paper or screen. Also that you reinforced that you are a writer if you are writing. Being a writer has nothing to do with publication, but of the act of writing. Now of course it’s always great to have an audience for your writing, but at the same time every writer writes a lot more than their audience ever sees.

  • http://simplyoptimal.net GP

    What an insightful commentary Chris. Well put.

  • http://simplyoptimal.net GP

    What an insightful commentary Chris. Well put.

  • http://www.ParadiseValleyHomesArizona.com/ Paradise Valley Homes

    Great tips. I tend to have a hard time blogging every day so I really like the tip about finding a moment of stillness. That’s a good way of looking at it. I typically try and find an “ideal” time but that’s just not realistic.

  • http://www.randomasthmainfo.com KePerry

    I enjoyed reading this post because sometimes being a writer feels like living alone on an island. It is nice to hear how others keep themselves going. Thanks!

  • http://www.jeremymday.com Jeremy M. Day

    Hi Chris,Very inspiring post! It can be tough, but the habit of writing just builds on itself. Each new post builds on the other. And yes, it takes a certain sort of curiosity to write every day. It is this curiosity, and the excitement of reporting what you have found, that makes you are writer. At least that is why I am a writer.Cheers,Jeremy

  • http://www.jeremymday.com Jeremy M. Day

    Hi Chris,Very inspiring post! It can be tough, but the habit of writing just builds on itself. Each new post builds on the other. And yes, it takes a certain sort of curiosity to write every day. It is this curiosity, and the excitement of reporting what you have found, that makes you are writer. At least that is why I am a writer.Cheers,Jeremy

  • http://ronaldredito.org/blog ronaldredito

    I’ve dived into blogging when I heard that it is good alternative to earn for a living. Some products say that you can even just sleep and let your business run on automation but in reality it is not like that.

    One needs to write and as you said, one should be disciplined. If one does not have budget for advertising, no one can find your website if you do not have content. One blog post with a niche keyword is not enough for you to rank on search engines.

    You need content and that would in turn drive traffic to your site and hopefully convert in sales if you are an affiliate of something.

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  • http://www.squaremartinimedia.com Angie A. Swartz

    It’s been too long since I stopped by for a leisurely read. I am glad to hear that others go down rabbit holes when friends talk about interesting topics that must be written about. It’s good to know I am not the only one missing everything that’s said afterward. I enjoyed this so much I might have to stop calling you Lee ;-)

  • http://www.squaremartinimedia.com Angie A. Swartz

    It’s been too long since I stopped by for a leisurely read. I am glad to hear that others go down rabbit holes when friends talk about interesting topics that must be written about. It’s good to know I am not the only one missing everything that’s said afterward. I enjoyed this so much I might have to stop calling you Lee ;-)

  • http://writedirection.com Debra Jason

    Thanks Chris. You read my mind and touched on points that resonated with me.
    You wrote “On the day you miss a post, don’t throw it all away. Just write two the next time you have a moment.”
    Well, I’d been feeling guilty as I hadn’t written a post. And, before finding yours today I sat down (at different times) and ended up writing two. Thanks again my friend!

  • Andrea

    This was really helpful. I’m writing to you at 6:15 am and I’ve found a moment of stillness! That will be my new quest. Thank you.

  • http://www.dougrawady.com Doug Rawady

    Great tips, Chris! I’ve been having a difficult time being consistent in my own writing efforts these last few weeks, and I know it’s largely because I don’t have a “daily discipline” mindset. I tend not to want to write something unless it can be a fully-fleshed-out, semi-in-depth, worthy-of-reading topic. That approach clearly limits my output because it typically requires a decent-sized block of time to execute.

    Your approach is almost the exact opposite of mine and – given your ability to crank out so much concise quality content – one that I really need wrap my brain around and embrace. Thanks for giving all of your readers a roadmap to follow.

    Doug

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  • Bkelly1066

    I love you. Not in a creepy way but in a good way. You have made me believe in my own ability.

  • Bkelly1066

    I love you. Not in a creepy way but in a good way. You have made me believe in my own ability.

  • Jennifer

    thanks….I’m of the, “I’m not a writer” mindset…but I keep trying. Sometimes it even works.

  • Christian Feeger

    Good on you, Chris. I’m of the ‘I love to write’ category. But even so, life has a habit of getting in the way at times, doesn’t it?
    Your ideas are so thoughtful (and insightful).
    Your comments, Chris, remind me that, despite all the obstacles, we can make things happen with the right mindset.

  • http://twitter.com/pvused Pacific Vacuum

    Absolutely great post. Love it, you’ve inspired me, and obviously several others before me.

  • http://www.thewatermarkgroup.org John Muldoon

    Awesome piece, Bradley. I connect with that both as a runner and a wannabe writer.

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  • Nicole Kureshi

    Inspiring post! I’ve heard it so many times before that you need to write daily, but you put it into a new perspective. It’s nice to think of it as finding a moment of stillness as opposed to cramming it into your schedule.

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  • http://www.alexdumitru.com Alex Dumitru

    I have started blogging daily a few weeks ago and I still find it hard, though I think I’ve only missed a day, so I’m glad I managed to do it. Now I was to write more than one post daily, which seems even harder for me. Let’s see if I manage to do it.

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  • http://www.geebackhouse.com Gee

    Definitely feeling interested in adapting and taking these ideas to execute on my own. Feels as if it were written just for me! Thanks.

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