The Quiet Craft of Cutting Words
Attention has quietly become the only genuinely scarce resource in a life saturated with information. Everything is available; almost nothing is absorbed. The writers and readers who thrive are not the ones who consume the most but the ones who have learned to protect a few hours of undivided focus from an economy built to fracture it.
The first draft exists to be finished, not to be good.
Almost all of the writing happens in revision. The draft is raw material; the craft is in the cutting, the reordering, and the ruthless deletion of everything that was fun to write but does nothing for the reader. Learning to enjoy that second phase, rather than merely enduring it, is what separates finishers from starters.
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