Write While True is a writing podcast for programmers. Each episode is a writing exercise or prompt. Sit down at a keyboard and cue us up. When the show is over, it's time to write.
This is the 7th episode of season four. I started this season in January of 2024. My intent was to document the process of writing a book. But even though this season is over a year long, there have only been 7 episodes, and that's because I took a 9 month break. I want to talk more about what happened during that break, and how I was derailed from my plans, and how I recovered. The Four Disciplines of Execution [affiliate link] On Writing Well [affiliate link] by William Zinsser Swimming in Tech Debt (my book) Help This Book (book sharing platform) Useful Books Community Transcript
But even with all of that new writing, a lot of the ideas and content are drawn from my blog. That's what I want to talk about today -- How I started this project by reviewing and gathering my work. My first step, at the end of 2023, when I decided that I wanted to write a book, was to immerse myself in my own writing, so I just read my blog. I just read all of the posts. Season 4 started with The Four Disciplines: 1, 2, 3, and 4 The Four Disciplines of Execution [affiliate link] Write While True Episode 13: New Ideas where I talked about ... ... A Technique for Producing Ideas [affiliate link] Morning Pages Write While True Episode 1: Training to Unblock Yourself Write While True Episode 19: Prompt Your Morning Pages Smart Notes Write While True Episode 2: Small Bits of Writing Journals Write While True Episode 21: Dedicated Journals Write While True Episode 22: Harvesting Journals Assembling first drafts Write While True Episode 3: First Drafts Transcript
My intention after episode 43 was to follow along the process of writing the book and share what I learned along the way. But, a few things happened that derailed me (in a good way). The Four Disciplines of Execution [affiliate link] Write While True Episode 23: Take a Break Taking a Successful Break Swimming in Tech Debt Follow-up on my Tech Debt Article in The Pragmatic Engineer Newsletter transcript
There's a hole in this process, and we need to fill that right now. This only works if you're doing the lead activities consistently, and if they really do build up to the end goal. It's true that working on the book is intrinsically fun and interesting. And if that's all that happened, I'd probably be okay with it, but I really do want a book in the end. Write While True Episode 40: Let's Write a Pamphlet Write While True Episode 41: The Lead Measure Write While True Episode 42: Keeping Score 4DX: Applying the Fourth Discipline Useful Books Community Transcript
As I mentioned in the past two episodes, I'm trying to write a short book, and I want to share the process as I'm going through it. For example, to help me structure my time, I'm using the book The Four Disciplines of Execution. In the last episode, I shared how I'm applying the second discipline. I defined an activity that I could do every day and a lead measure, a metric of that activity, that I could have as a goal for every week. The idea is that if I constantly achieve this lead measure, I believe that the larger goal will be achieved. My weekly goal is to spend at least one hour a day on five different days working on the book. It's a goal that resets every week. That way, a bad week doesn't derail me. Every Monday, I have a chance to try to win that week. But I have to remember to do it. Keeping this lead measure top of mind is what the third discipline is about. And that's what I want to talk about next. Write While True Episode 40: Let's Write a Pamphlet Write While True Episode 41: The Lead Measure How I am applying The Four Disciplines of Execution Transcript
My wildly important goal is to publish a fifty page book on a topic in my industry by the end of 2024. I defined it using the SMART goal format (S. M. A. R. T.), which means it's specific, measurable, achievable, relevant, and time-bound. This is a good way to define goals, but the issue with SMART goals is that even though you can easily tell if you have reached them, they don't drive day-to-day activities. That's where the 2nd of the four disciplines comes in. Write While True Episode 40: Let's Write a Pamphlet Write While True Episode 4: Make a Schedule Transcript
For season four, which I'm starting right now, my plan is to take you through my process as I try to write a short, focused book. I expect it to be about 50 pages. I call this kind of book a pamphlet. 4DX: Applying the First Discipline Write While True Episode 13: New Ideas In Praise of Pamphlets Generating Podcast Episode Ideas Transcript
The white pastel can draw white on top of the charcoal, so now I can make white marks, which can also be smudged and mixed. It's giving me a range of values I couldn't get before. Throwing white highlights onto a dark drawing is a way of directing attention and makes it more interesting. Black and white, on a drawing, are the extreme values. If I try to apply this idea to writing, it should also be a juxtaposition of opposite extremes. A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift Prompted Morning Pages Journals Transcript
I'm reading a book by Stanley Fish called How to Write a Sentence. I found this book by Googling that exact question because I wanted to find anything that might be a fit for what I'm podcasting about this season. How to Write a Sentence by Stanley Fish The Tools and Materials of Writing Write While True Episode 28: Complex Sentences Jabberwocky by Lewis Carroll Sponsor: Prompted Morning Page Journals Transcript
Today I want to talk about one of the rules that's in Strunk and White. It's actually in almost every book about writing, which is to use the active voice and to prefer it over the passive voice. Larry McEnerney analyzes the Gettysburg Address [YouTube] The Gettysburg Address by Abraham Lincoln The Sense of Style by Steven Pinker The Elements of Style by Strunk and White Politics and the English Language by George Orwell Transcript
The advice applies to any kind of writing. It resonated with me because I feel like I might be having that problem in my written work. That sometimes my writing feels like a stack of paragraphs. I am feeling the lack of propulsion that John and Aline described. Scriptnotes Episode 60 (transcript only) Scriptnotes Episode 61 (transcript only) Write While True Episode 1: Training to Unblock Yourself Write While True Episode 19: Prompt Your Morning Pages Write While True Journals Transcript
I recently came across the phrase zombie nouns, which was coined by Helen Sword. She's an author and currently runs a private consultancy to help writers. Back in 2012, she was teaching at the University of Auckland in New Zealand, and she wrote an article for the New York Times called Zombie Nouns. Write While True Episode 30: Finding Nouns and Verbs Zombie Nouns by Helen Sword in the New York Times Writers Diet tool for finding zombie nouns Transcript
What we're trying to do is we're trying to learn how to recall fit words when we need them in our writing. To get better at that, we need to be exposed to more interesting words and to practice using them. Imagine situations where they would be perfect. Making it memorable and ridiculous might help you remember the word when you need it. Write While True Episode 1: Training to Unblock Yourself Write While True Episode 19: Prompt Your Morning Pages The Sense of Style by Steven Pinker Transcript
The idea of collecting quotes is not something new. I think that's the way most people think of note taking in general. There's even a style of journal some people keep called a Commonplace book, which builds on this idea. In a Commonplace book, you are mostly collecting the thoughts of others. You might also put in your own reaction to those—your thoughts on those thoughts—but the focus is on the collecting. I want to recommend a spin on this idea. How to Take Smart Notes by Sönke Ahrens Transcript
I think one sentence from David Lambuth really sums up what I want to say about paragraphs. Here it is. There is no absolute rule for paragraphing. Your own feeling must be your guide. The Golden Book on Writing by David Lambuth The Elements of Style by Strunk & White Transcript
I'm going to use these three books again for today's topic, which is the order of words in a sentence. I love that these books tackle mundane topics, things that seem innate, but aren't. I mean, we can order words into something grammatical without much thought. Even though a ten-sentence word has ten factorial possible orderings, we can easily find the handful that are legal English. The Golden Book on Writing by David Lambuth The Elements of Style by Strunk & White Writing Down the Bones by Natalie Goldberg Transcript
Every book on writing tells you to avoid adverbs (and even adjectives). I find that hard to do in first drafts, but I do try to remove them in edits. You can tell that I haven't done enough editing if you see that I "really like" something or that a new programming language is "pretty good". Season 3 Write While True Episode 28: Complex Sentences Write While True Episode 29: Loose Sentences Books The Golden Book on Writing by David Lambuth The Elements of Style by Strunk & White Writing Down the Bones by Natalie Goldberg Sweep Editing Write While True Episode 6: Editing First Drafts Write While True Episode 7: Find Your Voice Edit in Sweeps Transcript
Last week, I spoke about something very fundamental—how to write complex sentences, and I'm going to continue along in that theme for what I'm now calling season three, drawing lessons from some of what I consider the greatest books about writing, and picking out ideas related to using words, sentences, and paragraphs. These are things that I've found that I need to work on, and I hope that that can help you too. The Golden Book on Writing by David Lambuth The Elements of Style by Strunk and White Write While True Episode 5: Audience and Message Oz: Review of wizard projection technology Transcript
I like to sketch, mostly with pencil and charcoal on paper. One of the first things I needed to learn was how my drawing tools and the paper interacted. What kind of mark did each level of pencil hardness make, and how was that different from charcoal? What kind of paper worked best? I did various exercises that helped me understand my own tools. I've been thinking a lot about this and trying to figure out what is the equivalent for this in writing. Here's what I've come up with. Write While True Episode 20: Extemporaneous Writing The Golden Book on Writing by David Lambuth Transcript
This is the fourth and final episode in a series I'm doing about the book Art & Fear by David Bayles and Ted Orland. In this, the final episode of the series, I'm going to tell you what they think you need to be in order to be an artist. Art & Fear by Bayles and Orland Write While True Episode 24: Thousands of Variations (part 1) Write While True Episode 25: Stopping vs. Quitting (part 2) Write While True Episode 26: Making Makes a Maker (part 3) Write While True Episode 5: Audience and Message Transcript
I decided to do a four-part series on the lessons I learned from Art & Fear by David Bayles and Ted Orland. This week, in part three, I want to talk about a quote about what art means to the maker. Art & Fear Write While True Episode 24: Thousands of Variations (part 1) Write While True Episode 25: Stopping vs. Quitting (part 2) Transcript
I reread the book Art and Fear by Bayles and Orland and they had so many ideas for how to get people to make art, that it worked for me to start my blog going again, and then ultimately restarting this podcast. For part two of this four part series on Art and Fear, I'm going to share the what they said that inspired me to not quit. Here's the quote. Quitting is fundamentally different from stopping, the latter happens all the time. Quitting happens once. Quitting means not starting again, and art is all about starting again. That quote is really the inspiration behind season two, and the episodes I've made since I restarted. Art and Fear by Bayles and Orland Write While True Episode 24: Thousands of Variations (Part 1 of the series) Transcript
One of the things that got me back to podcasting after a two year break was rereading Art & Fear by David Bayles and Ted Orland. This time, while I was reading it, I kept a lot of notes and found four themes that resonated with me and helped me get going again. The first theme is very practical. It's what they think is the secret to being prolific. For the past two months I have been applying it a lot. Write While True Episode 11: Quantity and Quality (discussed Art & Fear) Write While True Episode 3: First Drafts Write While True Episode 6: Editing First Drafts Art & Fear by Bayles and Orland Bird by Bird by Anne Lamott Transcript
We just passed the second anniversary of the break that I didn't come back from right away. I know exactly what was going on. I had a lot of travel to visit family and for work and it was just hard to find the time to plan and record podcasts. Well, since it's exactly two years later. It's summer again, and I want to take another break. But this time I have a plan to take a break, but still publish on schedule and hopefully, not lose my momentum. Write While True Episode 8: Lower the Bar Write While True Episode 5: Audience and Message Write While True Episode 11: Quantity and Quality Write While True Episode 20: Extemporaneous Writing Transcript
When I was done with a journal, I'd put it on the shelf with others. I do a good job of making sure to transfer anything important to a real tracking system at the end of the day, so there wasn't much in the journal that I thought would be useful. At some point, though, I picked up an old journal, it was probably a few years old at that point, and just flipped through it. As expected, it was mostly boring. Just a mundane list of what was going on that day. Meetings, task lists, chores. But every once in a while ... Write While True Episode 21: Dedicated Journals Write While True Episode 2: Small Bits of Writing Write While True Episode 12: Keep a Topic List Write While True Episode 13: New Ideas A Technique for Producing Ideas by James Webb Young Write While True Episode 19: Prompt Your Morning Pages Transcript
I've been using a paper journal for years. Even when I worked on big teams, I still kept a separate journal with my personal daily tasks and schedule. For years, I just used a single journal for everything. I'd just go through it and then start another one when I hit the last page. Any kind of paper capture that I needed to do was in that one journal. A couple of years ago I started splitting out separate journals based on the purpose. Write While True Episode 2: Small Bits of Writing Write While True Episode 14: Spaced Repetition Write While True Episode 1: Training to Unblock Yourself Write While True Episode 19: Prompt Your Morning Pages Recurring Journals Introducing Page-o-Mat Transcript
When I was 13, my mom got me an electric typewriter for Christmas. She was a secretary, and she taught me how to touch type, and she wanted me to have something to practice on. But unfortunately, when I opened it up, it didn't work. Write While True Episode 1: Training to Unblock Yourself Write While True Episode 3: First Drafts Write While True Episode 19: Prompt Your Morning Pages I Didn't Have a Disk Drive My New Podcast Generating Workflow Whisper (for transcribing) Audacity Audio Hijack Transcript
If you are just coming to this podcast on this episode, I have to tell you that I talk about Morning Pages a lot. It was the subject of Episode 1. Listen to that for the full description of what they are or read the book The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron, which is where I was introduced to the idea. The main thing to know is that I start each morning by writing three pages of long hand writing in an automatic stream of consciousness style. I never show them to anyone and they aren't meant to be published. The point is to train my brain to generate text on demand. If you read the entire thing, I would have a couple of sentences in a row here and there that make some sense, but overall, it's not well-structured in any way. My pages tend to stray from topic to topic because I'm not considering the entire text. This is the breakthrough I had today. Write While True Episode 12: Keep a Topic List Write While True Episode 1: Training to Unblock Yourself Write While True Episode 18: Taking My Own Advice The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron Transcript
I thought it would be a good idea to re-listen to all of my podcasts from season one. Each of them is only about 10 minutes and there are only 15 episodes, so it doesn't take too long. This had two effects. First I realized they weren't as bad as I thought, which made me feel better about restarting. The second thing is that I started to hear the advice almost as if it was coming from a third party because I had recorded these so long ago. I had dropped many of these practices during my break, so it was almost like hearing from a different person. But that person was making podcasts and I wasn't, so I decided to listen to him. The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron A Technique for Producing Ideas by James Webb Young Skin in the Game by Nassim Taleb Transcript
I thought about things that were going well, where I had a lot of output, like my programming projects. One thing I realized that helps a lot is that I am proud of that work. Doing it is a self-esteem builder, and I have a lot of confidence that I can meet my own standards. I've been programming for a long time, so this isn't much of a surprise. All during that time I challenged myself by doing bigger projects and learning new things. While learning new things and working on bigger and bigger projects helped me improve, it wasn't the most important factor. What helped me the most was the people I worked with. Transcript
I did season one of this podcast a couple of years ago. I did 15 episodes. They were about some of the basics of building up a writing habit, and then I stopped. In this season, I am going to explore how to restart projects in the context of restarting this one. I want to talk about one of the lessons I've learned. Transcript
I made this podcast, but I wanted to self-host, so I learned how to do that with s3 and wrote my own way to get analytics. So, Podcasting leads to programming. And then I wrote up a blog about that program (so it led back to writing) and now I am telling you about it on this podcast. Round and round it goes. The more times I go around the circle, the easier it becomes to write or podcast or program about one of the other things I'm doing. The content for this podcast is mostly taken from a blog post I made in February. Back then I just said that I should come up with some way to combine programming and writing more. This podcast was the result of that thinking. Sprint-o-MatWatchKit articles on App-o-MatPersonal Finance script Transcript
Last week I encouraged you to collect general knowledge. Viking trade routes, anime, Rothko paintings, architecture, typography, bluegrass standards -- where ever your interests lead you. For these kinds of things, it may be hard to write a note though. You could certainly write down something, but it's unlikely that you'll develop a few paragraphs of a coherent thought about lots of random things. James Webb Young said to use index cards for that. That would certainly work, but I recommend using spaced-repetition card software instead. Write While True Episode 2: Smart NotesWrite While True Episode 3: First DraftsEncyclopedia of Note-taking appsWrite While True Episode 13: New IdeasAnkiClozed Deletions videoAnother Clozed Deletions video Transcript
New ideas are combinations of old ones. A Technique for Producing Ideas by James Webb YoungMad Men: "Think about it ..." (on Amazon, free with Prime) Transcript
In the past, when I set goals to write more frequently, I was always stopped by not having ideas ready for what to write about. Or when I got one, I didn't have a systematic way of collecting them. I would sit down to write, but getting started on a new piece was too difficult. My ONE thing is make it so that when I sit down to write I have a checklist to work from. The ONE ThingAfford Anything podcast about The ONE Thing Transcript
I know that a lot of my episodes are variations on the theme of quantity. In episode one, I asked you to write morning pages every day. In episode 4, I asked you to make a schedule where you write multiple days a week. I've talked about the importance of producing many first drafts. In episode 8, I said you should lower your bar and just last week I shared my personal “why”, which is all about playing the infinite game because it's fun. The title of this podcast is a play on the idea of the infinite game. Art and FearIra Glass Transcript
The exercise this week is to think about your "why"? I don't think it's wrong to write for money or fame, but if you're an amateur like me, I'd find something easier to attain. The Practice by Seth GodinSeth Godin on #amwritingMy review of The Practice Transcript
I don't use a lot of social media, but if I don't plan my time intentionally, I'll find myself watching a lot of YouTube. It's not that I think that my life should be 100% dedicated to making new things or in solitary contemplation. But, there are times when I notice that level of output isn't where I want it to be, and so I take a good look at how I am spending my time. SelfControl AppDeep Work for Programmers and Self Control (from loufranco.com)The Artist's Way by Julia CameronDigital Minimalism by Cal NewportBored and Brilliant by Manoush ZomorodiNote to Self podcastBored and Brilliant challenge Transcript
This episode is about lowering the bar, and I'm tempted to just say to go do it and sign off. I won't do that, but I am going to keep the bar on this episode pretty low. Now, you're probably thinking -- Lou, I thought the bar for Write While True episodes was pretty low already. Transcript
Lately, I'm thinking a lot about what this podcast sounds like. I'm new to podcasting and I'm very aware that I have a lot to do to sound more natural, but that's not exactly what I'm talking about. Joanna Wiebe on Voice and ToneTone word list Transcript
I was first exposed to this idea at The Business of Software conference in 2017. Joanna Wiebe gave a talk about copywriting for SaaS businesses. She's an advertising copy writer, and the talk is mostly about that. It's worth watching the whole thing, but near the end, she said something that astonished me. Joanna Wiebe at BoS 2017 Transcript
Like many people I write to think. And, it helps. I set out with only inklings of an idea and by the time I am done, I usually have a coherent a complete thought. The writing contains it, but it doesn't communicate it. There's a difference between writing to think and writing to communicate and I finally understand that. The Craft of Writing Effectively (YouTube)Writing Beyond the Academy (YouTube)Good overview of the video with links to the handout Transcript
The times that I've made the least progress on writing was when I was trying to do it on the side or as a hobby. This isn't because of the relative amount of time I devoted to it. It was because I treated it as something I would try to fit in, and it never did. I could always find something else to do. Links: Writing Practice (podcast by Aliya S. King) - Episode 12 is very focussed on morning schedulesCal Newport's Time Block Planner Method Transcript
I've stared at a lot of blank pages. Technically, they were actually blank textareas, but you get the point. Links: How to Take Smart NotesBird by Bird by Anne Lamott Transcript
I found out that I didn't know how to read or write. This episode will show you how making a change to how I read made it much easier to write. Links: How to Take Smart NotesInterview and Q&A with Sönke Ahrens (YouTube)ObsidianEncyclopedia of note taking appsWriting While ReadingPlaying Non-programming Books Transcript
I started my blog 17 years ago, but wrote about 9 posts a year. Then, I started doing something that helped me write something I could publish every day. Links: The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron Transcript