Restarting My YouTube Channel: A 5-Day YouTube Video Challenge

YouTube channel on laptop by NordWood Themes
Photo by NordWood Themes on Unsplash

Brief Summary

In this post, I will cover the background to starting my YouTube channel and why I stopped. Also how I am restarting my YouTube channel by doing a 5-day YouTube Video Challenge. 

YouTube and Me

Towards the end of last year, I started a Youtube channel. Before finally taking the plunge I found every excuse not to start: Fear, perfectionism, no time, lack of equipment, being a dad, having a full-time job, not knowing what content to make. 

You name it. I gave myself every excuse in the book. If you have ever thought about starting a channel, then you can relate to this. 

But one day something changed. After weeks of procrastinating, I decided I would upload the easiest video possible. So I picked up my phone, shot a short video and uploaded it. 

After that, I started to get some momentum. I made a video a week, I committed to buying in some lighting equipment and I even turned my home office into a filming studio. Everything seemed to be going well. 

But after a month it all stopped. 

What Happened?

I don’t know exactly what happened. I think that I just wasn’t enjoying the process anymore. It had lost its fun. I had been using an accountability pact to encourage me to make a video every week for a month. This pact meant I would pay someone £100 if I didn’t upload a video. This might sound extreme, but I am a terrible perfectionist. If I didn’t do this I would have never uploaded any videos. After it ended, I was reluctant to continue with it as I thought I wouldn’t need it anymore. 

Then I got to the point where I was looking into buying a new camera. Again here I started to feel the excuse creep in. But this time it was a lot harder to distinguish between my excuses and genuine reasons. Obviously, the expense was a worry. Fear of buying the wrong camera played a big part and watching 50 videos of camera reviews only made things more confusing. The other big reason was that I could shoot high quality 4K Videos on my Phone. So why should I buy a camera? 

The Fun Factor

Looking back now I realise I was forgetting the importance of having fun. 

I was treating everything so seriously and worrying about it. It’s true you don’t need a fancy expensive camera to make youtube videos – I even proved that by making my best-looking video on my iPhone Xs. 

But buying new gear is part of the fun. 

Who doesn’t love the excitement of getting that delivery, unboxing it and using that new cool thing for the first time? It’s like being a kid again. Honestly, the 10-year old me wouldn’t have given it a second thought. He probably would have completely emptied his savings account out. 

Look, I am not saying we should be irresponsible with our money or our actions. But sometimes being too responsible, too serious and basically being too adult really can suck the fun out of things. 

I think it’s funny how when I was a kid I wished I was a grown-up. Then I could do and buy whatever I wanted. Now I am an adult I yearn for the carefree attitude of my youth. 


Restarting Youtube: 5 videos In 5 days Challenge

Ok. So one of my goals this year restarting my YouTube channel. It kind of stalled at the end of last year.

So now I am kicking things off again with another challenge. Starting March 1st (tomorrow) I will be uploading a new video every day for 5-days. Unlike my 7-day blog challenge, I decided to make this one a little shorter. Mainly because the process is going to be a lot more intensive having to write, film edit and upload all in the same day. Also, rather than the bar being set at just uploading a video (or just uploading a post in the blog challenge), I want to focus on practising some specific film making techniques. 

So here is a list on things I would like to try this week: 

Styles

  • Vlog
  • How-To / Tutorial
  • Short Film Style
  • Documentary
  • Comedy Skit
  • Unboxing/ Review
  • Interview/ 2 Camera

B-Roll

  • Overhead 
  • Slow-mo 
  • Speed ramp
  • Stock Footage
  • Artistic/ Mood

Transitions

  • Masking/ Frame blocking
  • The Whip
  • Smooth Zoom
  • Luma Key
  • Rotation

Special effects

  • Cloning
  • Logo Animation
  • Explosion

Obviously it will be hard to do all of these, but these ideas are just to get me started.

If you are interested in following along check out my videos here. Also, if are thinking about restarting your own YouTube channel or even just starting one, why not try joining in. And if you do please get in contact by leaving a comment below. 

Goodluck!

Do You Find Prompts Useful?

This brief post will be about using prompts as inspiration for creating online content.

It’s been just over a week since my 7-day blog challenge and I have had some time to reflect on what I’ve learned. One of the hardest things about the challenges was finding subjects to write about – especially in such a short time frame. The deadline forced me to settle quickly on an idea. Which meant there was no real room for in-depth research. That being said, the idea of the challenge was to simply write and publish every day. It didn’t really matter whether the article was good.

Recently I came across the idea of using prompts the help generate ideas for creative work. A YouTuber I follow was advertising to hire an editor. In the advertisement, he asked the applicants to make a short video using the prompt ‘Why we tell stories?’. Even though I didn’t apply, I did think about what sort of video I would make. Later that same week, my wife showed me a photographer on Instagram who was setting a 30-day photography challenge. Each day she, used techniques of learning photography as a prompt. e.g Day 1: The rule of thirds. It got me thinking about how useful prompts can be when learning something new.

Oftentimes when learning a skill we need to put in the reps. We need to practise the skill directly by doing it. For photography it’s taking photos; for blogging its writing and publishing; for making videos it’s filming, editing and publishing. But here’s the wrinkle. Each of these creatives skills starts with an idea, a subject, and finding that can take time and be exhausting. This is where prompts can help.

Here are two reasons why I think prompts are useful:

They Get Us Started

Firstly, It can help prevent procrastination caused by our perfectionism. Sometimes, it’s us who are most critical of our own ideas and work. We tell ourselves that they are awful or not interesting. We often mull over many ideas before we finally settle one, but only because the deadline is so near. All this concern over our ideas stops use from getting started and learning through practice.

But prompts give us the ideas.

Obviously, there is still thinking involved. But that thinking is directed into doing the work. we can focus on putting in the reps and we can play around with different techniques. Learning can become playful and even enjoyable.

They Help Us Realise That We Are Beginners

Following on from above, the perfectionist among us (me included) often forget we are only beginners. We think that our work should be polished and perfected on the very first try. We forget that pretty much everyone is rubbish when they start. This attachment to our ideas makes it hard to feel ok with persevering with our work.

But following a prompt is like doing an assignment set by a teacher. We are following ideas set by someone else. This can help us detach ourselves from the idea and instead attach ourselves to doing the work. We can see that we are just a beginner. This can be liberating and allow us to put our energy and creativity into our practice.

Here Some Useful Prompts

Photography.

  1. Shoot a subject using the rule of thirds
  2. Green
  3. Something you love
  4. Food
  5. Outdoors

Writing

  1. Review your favourite book
  2. History of…
  3. How to fix…
  4. My recipe for…
  5. Yesterday

Video

  1. Unboxing
  2. My favourite…
  3. Slo-mo
  4. How to make…
  5. Day in the life of a…

Conclusion

Practising skills is crucial to getting better. However, coming up with ideas for practising creative work can often be difficult and exhausting. This often leads us to procrastinate or give up. Using prompts can be a useful way to get started and focus on getting better at the skill at hand.

How to Develop the Habit of Writing Every day

For the longest time, I had struggled to keep consistent with my blog. I would upload a few articles here and there but nothing consistent. Even I after I committed to writing an article every week, the habit of writing just didn’t come naturally to me. It was always something I had to force myself to do.

If you can relate, then read on to find out how I developed the habit of writing every day.

The 7 Blog Posts In 7 Days Challenge.

Recently, I completed a 7 blog post in 7 days challenge. I set myself the challenge to practise turning my ideas into articles. I didn’t focus on quality and I didn’t worry about the aesthetic. I just focused on reps.

Focusing solely on reps allowed me to develop the meta-skills of writing every day. These are the smaller components of habit building such as:

  • Carving out time to write.
  • Getting the tools to write
  • Overcoming perfectionism
  • Using tips and tricks that work for me.
  • Building consistency.

All of these things allowed me to upload a post every day and help me build the habit of writing.

But there was an interesting side effect.

The Writing Itch

The day after the challenge I was happy not to have the pressure of writing a post. It was nice to take some time off. I enjoyed time with my family and relaxed with some of my favourite Netflix shows. ( I am loving ‘The Legend Of Korra’ Right now).

But that night something didn’t feel right.

The next day I decided to focus my attention and energy on a new project. I decided to start a new challenge and try the keto diet. However, as I was planning I noticed the urge to write a blog post about it.

This would have been fine if I hadn’t decided to reduce my post frequency to every 2-weeks. The idea was to write higher quality posts, with better research and more value to the reader. So I dismissed the urge.

But again something was off.

I think you can see where this is going.

After writing a post for 7 days straight I had not only established the habit. I also now had the itch to write. Now It feels weird not to write something towards my blog every day. In fact, that is why I am writing this very post.

The Habit Loop

Readers of the power habit by Charles Duhigg will be familiar with the habit loop: Cue, Craving, Response, Reward. I am not going to explain it fully here, but here is an article on James clears blog if you are interested.

In short, habitual behaviours are triggered by a cue, which leads to a craving. Our response to this then leads to a predicted reward.

So for me, the craving was the itch to write a blog post everyday, thanks to the habit I had been building.

Conclusion

The quickest way to establish the habit of writing every day is by putting in the reps. This will lead to a craving for that habit to be repeated and make it easier to perform in the future.

Final Day – Thoughts On My: ‘7 Blog Posts in 7 Days Challenge’

Today is the last day of my 7 blogs in 7 days Challenge. I must admit I glad it’s nearly over. Its been very challenging. But I am glad I did it.

In this final post, I want to delve a little bit into how I felt during the challenge and what I think I got from it. I plan to write a future article about specific writing lessons I learned. For now, here are the posts I wrote and a day-by-day journal of what did, felt and thought during my challenge.

The Posts

Here are the 7 posts I made during this challenge, which ended up spanning over 8 days because I missed one. (3-Feb-21 -> 10-Feb-21)

  1. When You Feel Like Giving Up, Challenge Yourself!
  2. How To Find Inspiration For Creative Work
  3. 4 Free Tools to Help You Write Better Online.
  4. How to Follow Through With Your Intentions To Build Consistent Habits.
  5. How to Prevent a Rut. The Habits Forged Out Of Failure
  6. How I Started My Blog – A Beginner’s Perspective
  7. Final Day: Thoughts On My 7 Blog Posts in 7 Days Challenge.

First of all, I want to say that these posts are not well written. How could they be? I hardly had a chance to proofread them. The ideas were rushed, the grammar sloppy (until I started using Grammarly) and the messages questionable.

However, that’s wasn’t the point. The point was to do a short experiment so that I could figure out how to do deliberate practice for my blog. I felt that this challenge has helped me understand that better, as well as providing me with some valuable insights.

Day By Day: Actions, Feelings and Insights

Day 1

What I did: Uploaded my first post and declared my challenge.

How I felt: At first I felt good. My motivation was high. Later I thought about the difficulty of the challenge and I started to question my intentions. Was this some attempt at a quick fix?

Insight: Motivation can help overcome the inertia, but the early days are where we face the strongest resistance.

Day 2

What I did: On day 2 I focused on research. Trying to find a compelling story to explain my blog. It was interesting to learn about the creation of Pokemon, but I took me all day to write my second post. Noticed that I like to add extra stories to make the same point. Which seems unnecessary.

How I felt: I started to realise the difficulty of the challenge and just how much time it was going to take. I started to feel fearful and confused. I considered giving up, removing the challenge post and chalking this up one to experience. I felt conflicted – one side of me was saying I should cut my losses. The other side of me was saying ‘But if you quit when things get hard you will never succeed.

Insight: The side of me that wanted to quit is that part that doesn’t like change. Yesterday It was throwing a bit of tantrum. Today it was trying to talk me out of the challenge using logic. This is where a public commitment really helped. The side of me that didn’t want to quit was backed up by the fear failing in public.

Day 3

What I did: I decided to go for a much simpler and easier post. Whilst procrastinating around writing my post, I was researching some tools to help improve your writing. I ended up making that the subject of my post.

How I felt: I felt exhausted from all the internal conflict. Looking up tools allowed me to let off some steam whilst feeling like I was doing work – classic procrastination. But I got that post out.

My insight: Internal conflict is exhausting. But even when procrastinating I could perform some related work.

Day 4

What I did: Came up with lots of ideas but didn’t use any of them. Started to consider the reason behind this.

How I felt: Today I didn’t have resistance I had been feeling. However, now I was dealing with the frustration of not knowing how covert my ideas into posts.

Insight: After dealing with internal resistance I was know feeling frustrated. Things were going smoothly but now I was focusing my thoughts on the problem. How do I get better at turning my ideas into posts? Although It didn’t feel like it, This was progress.

Day 5

What I did: I failed to upload a post today, because I spent most of my time trying to figure out the question of how to turn my ideas into posts. So I reverse engineered one of James Clears posts and broke it down to one idea. From this, I could see a strategy for writing articles. The issue was this strategy took more time.

How I felt: During my research I felt good. I was making a breakthrough. But after failing to upload I did feel disappointed.

Insight: Sometimes you have to miss a day to do some research and figure out a better way forwards.

Day 6

What I did: My main focus was getting back on the horse. I knew I had to upload something no matter how good or bad.

How I felt: I actually felt pretty neutral. I felt like I had learned something important from this challenge and thought that I could stop now. But I wanted to see it out the challenge.

Insight: The challenge could have ended twice in recent days, it felt like it was drawing to an end naturally. I am glad it was ending soon – a longer challenge would not have been a good idea.

Day 7

What I did: I spent a lot of my time procrastinating looking up SEO and setting up google analytics on my site.

What I felt: After making a bit of breakthrough I didn’t feel as interested in the challenge. I allowed myself to investigate other options.

Insight: It’s easy to get distracting once you lose interest in something. But I did it anyway. I had finally built the discipline to upload a post. It had become to feel natural – a habit was forming.

Day 8

What I did: I went for a walk and thought about the challenge. I looked over my previous uploads, and importantly, a couple of older posts before it.

How I felt. Happy the challenge was ending. Excited for the next challenge (uh oh – here comes the motivation for a new challenge).

Insight: Reflecting on the whole challenge wouldn’t have happened if iI didn’t see it through to the end. I realised I learned more from those older posts because I took my time. Also, I am happy uploading at lower frequency then I was – maybe every 2 weeks or once a month.

Insights summary

Overall the challenge gave me some valuable insights. What most interested me was how I felt on each day.

Motivation -> High Resistance -> Procrastination-> Progress – > Breakthrough/Failure -> Procrastinating -> Low Resistance -> Reflective

I was surprised at how quickly I wanted to quit. I expect this corresponded to the difficulty of the challenge. The accountability of uploading was crucial to me overcoming this.

On procrastination. I felt like this was my brain’s natural tendency to explore alternative paths. I actually found that it could be useful if it related to the area I was focusing on.

The beginnings of progress didn’t come until day 4 & 5, quickly followed by a breakthrough, as well as failure. I guess was easier to fail at this point for two reasons: (1). I was no longer relying on accountability to write my posts (2). I had got a reward from the challenge so carrying on seeming less attractive.

Again I was surprised that after 6 days I had got quite used to writing posts. The resistance was much lower than before, even after failing. I felt a habit was forming.

Seeing the challenge through to the end helped me draw a line under it. it allowed me to reflect on it as a whole. By reflecting, I discovered these higher-level insights that I would not have got if I had just stopped after day 5.

Final thoughts

Lastly, I want to highlight something worth mentioning. Whether It was a good day or bad I focused on the challenge the entire way through. For someone who tends to flit from one thing to another, this is huge. It did come at a cost. I was often writing to well into the night. I was snacking a lot and not focusing on healthy eating – I even put on a couple of pounds. But the challenge was intense and I expected some sacrifice. As I said I am glad it’s done, but I am even more glad I did it.

So next time you feel like quitting . Challenge yourself. – but only for a week 😉

How I Started My Blog – A Beginner’s Perspective

This is Post 6 of my 7 blogs posts in 7 days challenge.

Starting a blog is actually pretty simple. Before I set up mine, I must admit the whole Idea seemed daunting. To begin with, I had free blogs on websites like Blogger (formerly Blogspot) and WordPress. Mostly, because I didn’t want to spend money on web hosting – Or rather I was suspicious of the whole thing. Anytime I am asked for money on the internet I am extremely cautious – which I think is fair.

But the truth is, my fear was due to lack of understanding. So, I set out to educate myself – on the internet. The problem was this was so overwhelming. There were host providers advertising to me. Bloggers with affiliate links – who seemed like they were out to make money, rather than give objective advice. Others without affiliate links giving conflicting advice – use webflow, don’t use bluehost, etc. My head was spinning.

I nearly gave up at that point.

But I realised that all this research was never going to agree. There is no perfect solution. Sometimes the only way to learn is to take a risk and give it a try!

So I followed this guide, by YouTuber Thomas Frank. He seems like a trustworthy guy and I have followed him for years.

So I bought a domain name on hostgator and set up a wordpress website. Job done…. right.

Well yes and no. Theoretically, that is all I needed for starting a blog on my own website. But like anything we learn about, the rabbit hole always goes deeper.

SEO, Google Analytics, Google Adsense? I Am Still Learning.

SEO. Google Analytics, Google Adsense are things that you may come across when researching your own website or blog. And, depending on the source, these may be unnecessary or vital.

Once again I am overwhelmed.

I don’t know where to start or who to believe. But, bit by bit I am piecing things together. They may end up being unnecessary, but I think it’s still important to understand them and their place. I have found Nat Elison to be very useful on this stuff. I recommend checking out his 1 hour SEO For Bloggers Youtube Series. For now, my attention will be on improving my writing, but I am going to keep learning about these things.

No doubt I will start to feel comfortable again and, after that, I will probably discover something new and get totally overwhelmed. But that’s the nature of learning. You have to stretch yourself in order to grow.

How to Prevent a Rut. The Habits Forged Out Of Failure

Blog #5 of My 7 Blog posts in 7 days Challenge

Yesterday I failed to upload the 5th Blog post of my 7 blogs in 7 days challenge. I could give you the excuses but I’m not going to. The truth is, it doesn’t matter. What matters is that I don’t miss a second day.

How many times has this happened to you? You mess up after a good streak and think ” I’ve ruined this now, I might as well give up. I am not good enough” We allow one mistake to completely derail our progress. It’s silly. We’re only human after all and no one is perfect.

But the reality is that one mistake is not what ruins our progress. Its the repeated mistakes ups that occur after this, often encouraged by this flawed thinking.

To prevent himself from making this mistake, popular YouTuber Matt D’Avella follows something he calls the 2 Day rule. He allows himself to take a day off going to the gym if he doesn’t feel up to it, but he doesn’t allow himself to miss twice in a row.

Why Do We Fall Master Bruce?

If you’ve seen Christopher Nolan’s Dark Knight Trilogy you will be familiar with Bruce Waynes father’s advice, later repeated by Alfred.

Why do we fall Master Bruce, so we can learn to pick ourselves up.

The crucial word in this is quote is “learn”. We learn to pick ourselves after we have failed. We get back on the horse; We try again. Because if not, we are reinforcing the behaviour of giving up. I like how James Clear puts it.

“Missing once is an accident. Missing twice is the start of a new habit.”

James Clear Atomic Habits.

Conclusion

So next time you mess up. Forgive yourself. You are only human. But look at it as an opportunity to practice the habit of never missing twice. It’s probably one of the most important habits you can cultivate.

How to Follow Through With Your Intentions To Build Consistent Habits.

This is Blog 4 of My 7 Blog posts in 7 day challenge “

So far today I have had at least 4 post topics I have started to compose in my mind. With each one, I was super excited. When I was busy doing other things, I felt the paragraphs forming in my mind. The arguments. The evidence. To conclusion.

They all sounded amazing – even if I do say so myself.

But when I got down to writing them. Poof! They’re gone.

As quick as those thoughts came they have now gone. Even the ones I had managed to jot down a few notes for no longer appeal to me anymore. I can’t return to that state anymore.

It is strange how we feel so invested, so convinced and so enthusiastic about an intention, just for it to disappear later the same day.

The State of Things.

It’s amazing just how quickly our moods can change our feelings towards something or someone. Two hours ago I was completely fine with this person, but now I just can’t stand them. Maybe I’m hangry? Maybe I didn’t get enough sleep. Maybe they actually are a jerk!

This changeability explains why so many of us fail to follow through with our good intentions. We tell ourselves. I will wake up early tomorrow and go for a run. But when the time comes we just don’t feel the same.

The problem is that our state has changed. We change from minute to minute and our future selves many not feel in line with what we are feeling right now.

Get In the Zone.

If we want to reap that benefits of our good habits then we must stick to them consistently. Therefore, we need to make sure our future self is consistent with our present self. Here’s a tip for doing this.

Use A Motivation Ritual

In James Clears amazing book, Atomic Habits he suggests using a motivation ritual to help us get in the right state for whatever we are trying to do. A motivation ritual is a few simple actions that you perform before any given habit. Think of them as small habits that help prepare for the bigger habit you are trying to build.

For example, If you trying to build the habit of writing. Before you sit down, clear your desk and make a cup of coffee (or any drink of your choice). Each time you do this you build an association and your brain starts to anticipate what is coming next.

If you want to start working out at home. Go and fill up a water bottle, grab your headphones and start playing some music to get you in the mood. Holding your water bottle and listened to your workout playlist will now be associated with working out.

You can often see these rituals in top performers to get them in a peak state. English Rugby star Johnny Wilkinson used to perform the same actions before every conversion kick; Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards used to eat a shepherds pie before a concert and Michael Jordan used to chalk his hands and then clap them together right in front of the people sitting behind the scorer’s table before a game. At first, these sound like superstitions. And maybe for some, there were. But the repeated association allowed them to return to a particular state for performing.

Bonus: A good tip is to make these small actions less than 2 mins, easy to do and rewarding, especially for habits you feel a strong resistance to starting. Notice I didn’t say for working out.’Change into your workout clothes’ because that doesn’t feel rewarding.

Conclusion.

Next time you are struggling to stick to a habit, begin it with a small rewarding motivation ritual to encourage you to follow through with your intentions.

4 Free Tools to Help You Write Better Online.

Blog #3 of 7 in my 7 Blogs in 7 Days Challenge

Being able to write well is one of the most important skills. Whether its paper and ink or digital text, writing is still one of the best ways to communicate our ideas.

The trouble is I am not that good at it.

So I have set about trying to get better. The problem is that figuring out where to start has been a lot harder than I thought it would be. Prior to starting this blog, I knew nothing about writing or how to learn it.

However, here are 4 free tools I have found to be helpful. .

1. Grammarly

The Grammarly extension is a brilliant way to check for those spelling and grammar errors. Especially if, like me, you like to write your posts directly into WordPress. Writing directly in WordPress helps me reduce the friction in uploading.

2. Hemingway Editor

This website helps you write more clearly and succinctly. Just write in the editor directly or copy and paste in your text. The webpage will highlight areas of your text that are too long, complex, use too many adverbs or the passive voice style. It’s a great way to get immediate feedback on your writing.

3. Yoast SEO Plugin

Whilst Yoast primarily focuses on improving the SEO (search engine optimisation) of your posts, it does have a nice readability feature. It tells you where how readable your post is and gives you suggestions to improve it.

4. WordPress

Okay, this might seem obvious for anyone already writing online. But for those who aren’t writing publicly, this is one of the best ways to improve. This is because it forces you to clarify your ideas. In most instances, you’re trying to communicate to a stranger – so writing a blog helps you practice turning those ideas into comprehensible writing.

How To Find Inspiration For Creative Work

‘This is Blog 2 of My 7 Blog posts in 7 day challenge “

Over two decades ago a young Japanese man named Satoshi Tajiri, was inspired to make what would become a hugely successful cultural phenomenon.

Keep reading to find out what we can learn to from this example.

The Craze That Swept The World

Growing up in the 90s It was hard to miss an international cultural phenomenon that would still be around 25 years later. The franchise has spawned multiple video games, TV series, films, books and a very famous trading card game. Today it is the highest-grossing media of all time, earning a whopping estimated 98 billion dollars, trumping even that of Star Wars, another successful franchise that has been out nearly 20 years longer.

I am of course, talking of Pokémon.

For those people who have been living under a rock, Pokemon (a portmanteau of Pocket Monster) started its life as a Japanese Nintendo video game in 1996. In the game, the player collects small creatures called Pokemon, trains them to become stronger and battles them against other character’s Pokemon as a kind of sport. In the fictional universe in which they exist, there are special gyms to train Pokemon and even leagues and competitions. The franchise’s famous slogan ‘Gotta Catch Them All’ relates to players journey throughout the world trying to collect all the original 151 Pokemon to become the ultimate Pokemon champion.

What some people may not know is that the inspiration for Pokemon came from the creator’s, Satoshi Tajiri’s, childhood hobby of insect collecting.

As the story goes, Tajiri used to collect insects as a child in what was then, a more rural area of Tokyo. He even earned himself the nickname of Dr Bug. However, as Tokyo became increasingly urbanised, habitats for insects were lost and insect collecting became less accessible. When Tajiri came up with the idea for the video game Pokémon, he saw it as a way for others to experience the enjoyment of exploring and collecting, in the same way, he did with insects.

Combining Tajiri’s two passions: video games and insect collecting, may not have seemed like it would be an obvious success. Even at the time, executives at Nintendo did not really grasp the concept. But they were impressed by Tajiri’s programming skill, so they went along with it.

Finding inspiration in Non-obvious places

Oftentimes when we find ourselves at a creative dead end, we often look for inspiration in the same area of our work. If we write about productivity, we read productivity books and articles, we make videos about tech, we read tech reviews and watch tech videos. If we make video games, then we might copy the formats of other video games out there. However, we also have seemingly unrelated interests, that if we considered them, could offer a new angle or take on our work. In fact, that was the very nature of the article – I linked my knowledge of entomology, video games to offer a post about combining other interests to find inspiration. I am not actually offering anything new or groundbreaking here. Most people already know this. But I am using my uniques experiences to produce a blog post that combines the things I am interested in.

So next time you need some creative inspiration for your work, try looking at what your other interests could offer you.

When You Feel Like Giving Up, Challenge Yourself!

In January I set myself the target of writing 1 blog every Sunday. I failed to hit that mark by 1, on the very last Sunday of the month. Even though I had done some thorough research on the idea for my post I couldn’t seem to follow through with it. I didn’t feel like I was ready to write it, I didn’t feel like it was good enough. I didn’t feel like I was getting any better.

As had become my habit of my last few posts, I left writing to the evening of the deadline. Forcing myself to stick to that deadline was the only thing that kept me uploading consistently. As I wrote at the beginning of this year, we need to start new habits by simply showing up’.

But at some point, we hit a stumbling block. We don’t feel like we’re progressing. We conclude ” I’m bad at this and I am not getting any better, so it’s a waste of time”.

And this is the point at which most people give up.

In this post, I want to discuss what we can do when we hit this pivotal point.

Photo by Glenn Carstens-Peters on Unsplash

Just showing up

The reality is that simply showing up won’t make you better at what you are trying to do. However, it is crucial because it’s the baseline from which improvement is made. Trying to improve without showing up is like expecting to build muscle by reading about the best techniques but never going to the gym. On the other hand, only showing up is like, expecting to build muscle whilst only doing the bare minimum every time you go to gym. Neither alone will produce the result you want.

Showing up + Deliberate Practice = Improvement

As I said, in order to start a skill, we should build the habit of showing up first, but if we want improve on that skill, then we need to perform deliberate practice.

Deliberate practice is different from regular practice. Regular practice is just repeating something over and over again mindlessly – usually without any useful feedback. Think of someone trying to learn guitar, but every practice session they just play the same scales, riffs, and songs that they’ve always done. They compound their mistakes and, even worse, they automatise the habit of this type of practice so it is a negative feedback loop.

Now contrast this to deliberate practice. A guitar player might isolate a particular area they are weak on, break it down and find ways to improve on it. They set out to practice it, evaluating the impact on their overall ability to play. They use feedback to test whether they are improving or not, maybe from themselves or maybe from a coach.

This leads of an obvious question? If we want to do deliberate practice, which parts should we focus on to begin with?

Focus on the Fundamentals

Obviously, it makes sense to start improving the most important areas first. The fundamentals. This is where coached/ guiding learning deviates from self directed learning.

Coached / Guided Learning

When we have a coach, or some syllabus to guide us, they can help direct our learning to focus on the fundamentals. What’s more, is that they can also give us immediate feedback. This is why basic tutorials can be super helpful when starting something new because they allow us to practice some of the fundamentals. The drawback of a coach/ tutorial is that by making these process easier, we don’t internalise our learning as effectively. As Sönke Ahrens puts it in ‘How to Take Smart Notes, p 88’:

“[Teachers] attempt to make learning easier for their students by prearranging information, sorting it into modules, categories and themes. By doing that, they achieve the opposite of what they intend to do. They make it harder for the student to learn because they set everything up for reviewing, taking away the opportunity to build meaningful connections.”

Therefore, if we are not careful this knowledge and skill can easily decay and be forgotten and all the time, effort and money we invested will be wasted.

Self-Directed Learning

For self-directed learners we have the opposite problem. Finding the focus of deliberate practice takes much more work, and oftentimes can lead to focusing on less important skills or even completely Irrelevant ones. However, when a self-directed learner does deliberately practise a fundamental skill, they get much more out it. Because it requires more work, they are more likely to remember it.

A Combined Approach.

An ideal approach is to try to combine both guided learning and self-directed learning. If we have a coach, then we should make sure we spend some time practising those fundamentals and expanding on them.

If a coach is not available, then we can research on the web or in books and look for repeatable themes that come up over and over again. These are likely to be related to the fundamentals of what we are trying to improve. In his book on rapid skill acquisition, the first 20 hours, author Josh Kaufman suggest:

For rapid skill acquisition, skimming is better than deep reading. By noticing ideas and tools that come up over and over again in different texts, you can trust the accuracy of the patterns you notice and prepare your practice accordingly.

Kaufman, Josh. The First 20 Hours (p. 29).

If In Doubt, Try A Short Experiment

Maybe we’ve skimmed some books and some articles, but we still can’t figure out where to start. Maybe we’re completely overwhelmed now. Maybe we feel even more lost than when we started. If that’s the case, we shouldn’t worry. Instead, we should try a short experiment. Here we can use our intuition as a barometer. We should pick something that we think might be important to what we want to learn. Then set aside some time each day to improve it. After a week we can review our experiment we can see if we have improved.

Back to My Blogging

There are many fundamentals that I need to work on in my writing, but the one I feel that I am struggling with the most is connecting my research with my ideas.

My current approach is to go through related books and underline a few paragraphs and then try to use them as the basis for my blog.

It might make sense to start with research first, but now I feel that I should develop my own ideas first.

If I start writing my idea first, I can then be reminded of the things I have researched. Then I decide whether they fit into my narrative. Plus, I can identify areas that are lacking and do some focused research and fill in the gaps – rather than trying to become an expert in the whole subject.

However, this is just a theory, so I am going to do a short experiment to see if it makes a difference.


My Challenge: A Blog A Day For 1 Week

Upload a blog post everyday, for 1 week. (3rd Feb – 9th Feb 2021)

Rough Plan:

  1. Start writing first from Am to Noon
  2. Edit in the Afternoon, limit to 4 O’clock.
  3. Publish
  4. Decide tomorrows subject.
  5. Evening – research and take notes.

If you read these posts, please leave constructive feedback. I would really appreciate it.

I know that my writing skills are far from good right now, and I have a long way to go but I hope that using deliberate practice and showing up every week, I hope to get better.


Resources Mentioned

How to Take Smart Notes: – By Sönke Ahrens

The First 20 Hours: How to Learn Anything … Fast by Josh Kaufman