Sean D’Souza’s latest ‘PsychoTactics’ article is titled “Why Rest Is Critical To Become A Better Writer”. [PsychoTactics Article]


Sean D’Souza’s latest ‘PsychoTactics’ article:

Why Rest Is Critical To Become A Better Writer</font

Every day at a certain point in my day my brain is exhausted.And this tiredness has nothing to do with writing.It’s rather got something to do with walking. And listening.

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And yes, let me explain.
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Every day I take a brisk walk for about an hour. And I almost always have my iPod and I’m almost always listening to a course, some educational stuff, or learning a language.

But about 45 minutes into the walk, something weird happens. My brain shuts down. No matter how much I try to focus, whole sections of the audio seem to drop out. I get easily distracted. I try harder than ever to concentrate, but despite my best efforts the information seems to have no hold on me.

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My brain is overwhelmed with information
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And it doesn’t even have to be new information. New information is extremely exhausting, because my brain has to work out:

1) the relevance of the information.
2) the applications to my every day life.
3) how to use the information in the right manner (and not goof it up).

This mental calisthenics takes enormous computing power. And by the 45 minute mark, I’m exhausted.

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But when I go through the same information the next day I’m refreshed
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And this is because my brain has rested. And it’s had time to absorb, sort out and tidy the information into tiny little brain cupboards. Now I start to build on the previous day’s work. And so every day, a new layer is added.

And this brings me to writing articles daily instead of once a week.

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You are wasting your time if you try and write once a week
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When you’re learning new concepts, the brain needs to struggle and sizzle a bit every day. Then it needs a rest. The next day it builds on that information it learned the previous day. The frying and sizzling goes on.

And then it rests again. However, if the brain goes through working on one factor day after day, for a week or so, it learns on a daily basis. It adds to the knowledge, so that by the time the week has ended it’s pretty confident about the new learning.

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So let’s take an example…
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Let’s say you’re in the Psychotactics Article Writing Course. And on the first week, you only work with creating structure by answering the questions: How, what, why, when etc.

You keep at it, day after day. The first few days are pure torture. Then something seems to settle. By week three or four, the structure issues concerning what, why, when etc. doesn’t faze you at all.

Nope, you’ve got something else that drives you nuts. Like creating angles. Or creating drama. Or flow.

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If your brain tries to take on all of the concepts together it goes into a state of confusion
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But if it handles one form of structure a week, day after day, then you know what happens, right?

Yes, you get better. And the reason you get better is because the brain gets time to rest. It gets time to resolve glitches. It gets time to store. It gets time to layer the information without having the burden of learning and applying it all.

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But surely you don’t have time to write every day
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You probably don’t. And I don’t. And no one has time to write every day. But we believe we can indeed have one big chunk of time in the week, and that’s when we’ll get things done. And of course you know what comes next. Not only will that chunk of time come and go, but you’ll be under more pressure than ever. And you’re more confused than ever.

Setting aside even fifteen minutes will get you to write three-four paragraphs. It doesn’t matter if they’re crappy paragraphs. It doesn’t matter if the headline stinks. It doesn’t matter if there’s
no flow.

What matters is that you do the every day discipline. What matters is that you’re giving your brain the best chance to succeed by giving it a break between successive sessions.

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Of course there’s a story why I started writing once a day
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At one point I wasn’t writing once a week. I was writing once a month. And writing was torture. I’d struggle over an article for a day or two, and there was no guarantee that I’d complete the
article.

And I’ll tell you I wasn’t having any fun at all. I did it because I had to. I did it because it was helping our business get more clients. But I hated the process of writing the article. Of course once it was done, I’d preen around the words and be all happy with my work of ‘art’, but the process, arrrrrrrgh I hated the process. So I did something quite weird.

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I started writing more often
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I started up a membership site at 5000bc.com. There was absolutely no content at 5000bc when I first started. So in a moment of bravado I promised the members five articles a week. And though I was petrified about meeting this deadline, I went about it systematically and turned out an article or two a day.

Most of the early articles weren’t long and structured. They were short –a bit like blog posts. They had interesting pieces of information, but there was nothing dramatic about the style and
structure. And then an amazing thing happened.

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I was able to write five-seven articles a week with more ease than an article a month.
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It didn’t make sense. Surely I was going to run out of material, I thought. Surely that stupid Writer’s Block would head-butt me sooner than later, I thought. But instead my brain took over. The discipline of writing every day forced my brain to think of innovative ways to have an endless run of content and no fear of writing whatsoever.

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Your brain is a lot like my brain
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It works. Then it shuts down.
Then it needs its siesta, so it can wake up refreshed and live to write another day.

Try the discipline of writing every day, and resting every day. Not because I say so, but because without it there’s only struggle and frustration.

Sean D’Souza

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*IMNewswatch would like to thank Sean D’Souza and Psychotactics for granting permission to reprint this latest article.

 

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