The Discipline of Daily Words: When the Well Runs Dry and Then Overflows Again
Since 2009, I have lived a life measured not just in days, but in posts.
Some people mark time by holidays, birthdays, or the changing of the seasons. I mark mine by the quiet, persistent rhythm of daily blogging, sometimes once a day, sometimes twice, always with the same unspoken challenge: Can I say something today that is worth someone else’s time?
Let me tell you, it is not easy.
There are mornings when the mind feels like a well that has been drawn from too often. You lower the bucket, expecting something, an idea, a spark, even a half-formed thought and up it comes…empty. On those days, the blinking cursor feels less like an invitation and more like an interrogation.
What more is there to say?
After all, I have written about life, food, history, war, aging, medicine, television, jazz, family, and the quiet observations of everyday living. I have revisited my childhood, reflected on my career, and wandered through the many rooms of memory. And still, each day asks the same question: What now?
Relevance is another demanding companion. It is not enough to simply write. The writing must matter at least to someone. The challenge is to find that delicate balance between the personal and the universal. Too personal, and it risks becoming a private diary. Too general, and it fades into the background noise of the world.
And then there is the ever-present fear of being…boring.
No writer wants to imagine a reader clicking away halfway through a post, or worse, not clicking at all. That thought alone can freeze the fingers before they even touch the keyboard. Yet, despite all this, I keep writing. Why?
Because every so often, something remarkable happens.
A comment appears.
A reader, perhaps halfway across the world, takes a moment to say, “I enjoyed this,” or “This reminded me of my own life,” or simply, “Thank you.” And just like that, the well is no longer empty. It is overflowing.
Those few words often brief, sometimes profound carry more weight than they might seem. They remind me that writing is not a solitary act. It is a conversation, one that stretches across time zones, cultures, and experiences. It tells me that somewhere out there, a thought I had in the quiet of my room found a home in someone else’s mind.
And with that realization, something shifts.
The fatigue lifts. The doubt softens. The ideas return not forced, but flowing. One post leads to another. What began as effort becomes momentum. What felt like obligation becomes joy again.
I have come to understand that inspiration is not always something you wait for. Sometimes, it is something your readers give back to you.
After all these years thousands of posts later, I have learned that writing daily is less about having something brilliant to say every time, and more about showing up. It is about trusting that even on the quiet days, when the words seem reluctant, something meaningful can still emerge.
And if not today, then perhaps tomorrow. But more often than not, just when I think I have nothing left to say, a reader’s voice reminds me otherwise.
And so, I write on.
- Symptoms: Daily tasks become arduous, decisions paralyze you, and creative tasks turn into a drain.
- The Misconception: Believing that you must always be at peak capacity. No well is full to the brim at all times; dryness is a normal, albeit serious, part of the creative cycle.
- The Trap: Attempting to force creativity from an empty place leads to frustration and imitation.
- Write Anyway (Badly): The biggest difference between a professional and an amateur is that the professional writes through the block. Give yourself permission to write "shitty drafts," knowing that editing can fix poor words, but not a blank page.
- The 10-Minute Rule: Set a timer for 10–15 minutes and freewrite without stopping, ignoring grammar or sense. This tricks the brain into moving.
- Change Your Routine: If your routine isn't working, break it. Switch from typing to pen-and-paper, or change your environment to a cafe or park.
- Dig Deeper (Study): Instead of trying to create, consume. Dive into research, read intense non-fiction, or study difficult passages to find new angles for your own work.
- Rest is Not Laziness: If your "cup" is empty, it cannot pour. Rest and relaxation are part of the creative process.
- Change of Scenery: Sometimes, you must stop, shut down the laptop, and go experience life to find new inspiration.
- Input Before Output: To create an overflow, you must carry something inside. Fill your well with reading, prayer, observing the ordinary, or engaging in hobbies.
- Write from the Overflow: Once you are filled again, your writing will naturally flow as life-giving water, rather than forced effort.
- Consistency over Intensity: 5–10 minutes daily is better than a 5-hour session once a month.
- The 66-Day Rule: It takes roughly 66 days for a new behavior to become a habit, so the first two months are the hardest.
- Keep a "Swipe File": Carry a notebook to capture ideas as they come. Often, the dry spell happens because we fail to capture ideas when the well was full.








