Post by account_disabled on Dec 24, 2023 19:09:11 GMT 14
During writing, various elements intervene to distract the normal flow of ideas and the writing itself. Writing means freeing one's thoughts and giving them a complete shape, making them fixed forever on paper. It's not easy to write continuously, because distractions are all around us, ready to interrupt the work of writing. I've listed seven types of distractions that usually make writing take longer than expected. 1. Word count The length of a post or story is an important element, but this does not mean that the number of words should bother the writer while writing. We tend to constantly check how many words we have written, maybe even every sentence.
This slows down the work, the production of texts. And it doesn't give any certainty about the success of the post or story. It is useless to check the number of words at the beginning, when you have written a few paragraphs. Half a page of Special Data Word or Writer is basically about 300 words. Solution : Write using notepad. At the end of the article, paste the text into your favorite program and finally check what you have written. 2. Time Checking the time is also another frequent distraction. How long does it take you to write a post? Much more if you are always looking at the computer clock. A post or story does not have a set time to be written. Decide at the beginning how much time to dedicate to that text that day and set the alarm to warn you when time is running out. Then you can look at the time.
Solution : Hide the computer time and take off the watch. 3. Continuous rereadings A post and a story should certainly be reread before publication. But not continuously while writing. The rereading must be done at the end, when the corrections will be made. Often rereading the text while you write is harmful to the writing itself, as it breaks the flow of thoughts: you risk not remembering what you were writing. By continually rereading, you don't free your mind from those thoughts, but you crowd it with notions that you had already removed from your head. Notions that will now hinder the flow of new thoughts. Solution : force yourself not to reread what you are writing.
This slows down the work, the production of texts. And it doesn't give any certainty about the success of the post or story. It is useless to check the number of words at the beginning, when you have written a few paragraphs. Half a page of Special Data Word or Writer is basically about 300 words. Solution : Write using notepad. At the end of the article, paste the text into your favorite program and finally check what you have written. 2. Time Checking the time is also another frequent distraction. How long does it take you to write a post? Much more if you are always looking at the computer clock. A post or story does not have a set time to be written. Decide at the beginning how much time to dedicate to that text that day and set the alarm to warn you when time is running out. Then you can look at the time.
Solution : Hide the computer time and take off the watch. 3. Continuous rereadings A post and a story should certainly be reread before publication. But not continuously while writing. The rereading must be done at the end, when the corrections will be made. Often rereading the text while you write is harmful to the writing itself, as it breaks the flow of thoughts: you risk not remembering what you were writing. By continually rereading, you don't free your mind from those thoughts, but you crowd it with notions that you had already removed from your head. Notions that will now hinder the flow of new thoughts. Solution : force yourself not to reread what you are writing.