PlayBook✍️
First Draft Blitz
Write the entire thing in one session. No edits, no second-guessing, no backspace. Let the mess be magnificent.
€ 0–5
budget
Ignite
pace
De meeste mensen ontdekken dat hun beste ideeën verscholen zitten achter hun perfectie-angst. Een eerste versie hoeft niet goed te zijn, alleen compleet. Het gevoel van een lege pagina verdwijnt zodra je stopt met nadenken over wat je wilt schrijven en gewoon begint te schrijven wat er is. Die ene zin die je de avond ervoor opschrijft, wordt je kompas voor de volgende drie uur.
Ergens halverwege het tweede uur gebeurt er iets vreemds. Je vingers bewegen sneller dan je twijfels, en plotseling schrijf je dingen die je niet wist dat je dacht. De koffie wordt koud op je bureau, maar je merkt het niet. Dit is niet het moment voor mooie zinnen of perfecte structuur. Dit is het moment waarop het verhaal, het artikel, of het plan eindelijk bestaat, rommelig en echt, klaar om later gepolijst te worden.
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by PlayTryBe team
The night before: write down in one sentence what you're going to create tomorrow. Pin it where you'll see it in the morning.
Suggestion: "Tomorrow I will write the first draft of [specific thing]." Clarity tonight means momentum tomorrow.Morning. Clear your workspace. One surface, one tool, one drink. Close every browser tab. Put your phone in another room. Set a timer for 3 hours.
3Before you type the first word: close your eyes. Visualise the finished piece. Not the perfect version , just the existing version. It exists. You just need to get it out.
Start writing. The only rule: do not stop moving forward. No re-reading, no editing, no fixing typos. If you get stuck, type "AND THEN" and keep going.
Suggestion: Bad sentences are better than no sentences. You can fix bad , you can't fix blank.At the one-hour mark, stand up. Stretch. Refill your drink. Don't read what you've written. Don't even glance at it. Sit back down and continue.
Somewhere in hour two, the inner critic goes quiet. You stop writing what you think you should say and start saying what you actually mean. That's the draft talking.
Push through to the end. Write the last line. It doesn't have to be good , it has to exist. Type the final period.
Suggestion: If you don't know how to end it, write: "And that's everything I know about this right now." You can fix endings later.Save it. Close the file. Don't read it. Set a calendar reminder for 48 hours from now: "Read your draft." The space between writing and reading is where clarity lives.
I wrote something that didn't exist three hours ago. It's messy, it contradicts itself, and the middle sags. But it's real. And real can be improved. Blank cannot.
Reward yourself. Go for a walk, eat something good, call a friend. Creation deserves celebration, even when it's rough.
For anyone copying this
Do as we did
Suggestions
- Know what you're writing BEFORE you sit down. A blog post, a short story, a letter, a chapter. Define the container.
- Use the simplest tool possible. A plain text editor. A notebook. Nothing with formatting options.
- Eat a real meal before you start. Hunger is not creative fuel , it's a distraction.
- Tell someone your deadline so you can't secretly quit.
Variations
Handwritten
Handwritten: Use pen and paper only. The physicality changes the thinking.
- Note: Handwritten: Use pen and paper only. The physicality changes the thinking.
Timed sprints
Timed sprints: Write in 25-minute Pomodoro blocks with 5-minute breaks. Stand and stretch each break.
- Note: Timed sprints: Write in 25-minute Pomodoro blocks with 5-minute breaks. Stand and stretch each break.
Dictation draft
Dictation draft: Speak your entire draft into a voice recorder. Transcribe later. Your mouth knows different words than your fingers.
- Note: Dictation draft: Speak your entire draft into a voice recorder. Transcribe later. Your mouth knows different words than your fingers.