If necessary, we disconnect the WLAN if we always tend to check where our house is on Google Maps during our writing hours. Step #7: Set the writing anchor We showed up on our writing date and created the best writing conditions? That alone is usually half the battle. We make writing even easier if we also set an anchor with writing as soon as we see, hear, or feel it and puts us directly in the writing mood . Like music for example. A playlist that we only listen to while writing (rather than for Sunday brunch or jogging) can catapult us straight from 0 to writing. If you want, you can use my writing playlists. Another possible anchor could be a writing cape .
A writing cape is like a superhero cape - only for writing. Every time I put it on (it makes a soft *whoosh*), I evoke the holy Brontë, Rowling and Austen in me. I can feel mobile number list the typists awakening in me, yes, how the typist is strong with me. I am one with my thoughts and gently slide my fingers over the keyboard. Line by line, page by page emerge effortlessly as outside, to the lovely spring song of the birds, a unicorn gallops by... Am I exaggerating? Well, maybe a tiny bit.The fact is: It helps enormously to give yourself the sign “Now is the time to write”. Even if it's a little crazy or might seem silly to other people. Step #8: Warm Write Just like athletes warm up easily or musicians play scales up and down, we should also warm up before we tackle a specific blog article or newsletter text.
It doesn't have to be long. Five minutes of warm writing is quite sufficient. The only important thing is that we relax our brain and writing muscles and get in the mood for writing. What the warm-up could look like in concrete terms depends very much on our preferences. Many participants in my writing circles like the braindump . For five minutes we just start writing and empty our heads. And when we don't know what to write, we just write "I don't know what to write sdölkfuwer blablabla..." Others, on the other hand, like writing affirmations . For five minutes we write the same sentence over and over again - the message that makes us feel peaceful as we write.