đŚ Creative Leftovers
#94 â Stop while the going is good. Leave a note on what comes next. Your future self will thank you.
Itâs the end of the day, but you just got into some productive flow. Youâre on a roll, so you tell yourself, âLetâs just keep going. Itâs almost done.â Youâre almost at the finish line, so why stop now?
Unless youâre on a deadline, thereâs value in leaving a little for tomorrow. The obvious reason to avoid overworking yourself. But there are a few other benefits to leaving creative leftovers.
I first learned this lesson years ago during a pair programming session, where I worked on a problem together with my coworker. Weâd both sit at the same desk, each with a keyboard connected to the same computer, alternating roles of typing and talking along the way.
We were writing tests for our code using a technique called TDD, or test-driven development. With that approach, we write tests for code that doesnât exist yet. We would run the newly written tests, expecting them to fail. Then we would implement the code needed to make them pass.
The failing tests serve as a handy guide for what to do next.
By the end of the day, we got most of the tests passing, but a few red failures remained. I suggested we stay a little later to finish them off, but my coworker shook his head. âItâs better to start the day with broken tests,â he said.
I was surprised. Why would we want to start the day with failure?
After thinking about it, I realized the value: The next morning, weâd sit down at our desks and re-run the tests. The red tests from the night before would fail, and serve as a clear guide of what to start with.
Thanks to the reminders of the night before, weâd skip the morning lull of figuring out what we need to do, and jump straight into action.
The value of leftovers isnât limited to programming. You can apply the same idea to writing and other creative endeavors. Take it from Hemingway:
Stop in the middle. Never stop working at the natural barriers. They next time you start working, the barrier will be the first thing you encounter, and you wonât have the momentum to overcome it. Try to stop writing mid-chapter, or mid-sentence (or mid function). Know how to finish, but stop working. The next time you start, you know exactly what needs to be done.
The same way youâd leave failing tests in programming, you can leave notes for yourself in writing or any other creative endeavor.
I often leave notes at the end of writing sessions working on my book of fables. I usually just write a few bullets in-place, thinking about two things:
What happens next in the story?
What open questions remain?
When I come back, that context is invaluable. It still takes me time to start writing, but thanks to the notes, I start thinking about the right problems immediately. David Perell shared some similar advice for leaving yourself a summary, advising that you write down where youâre stuck and what to work on next.
I donât always go in the same direction the notes suggest. Theyâre generous gifts from my past selfâI can use them or ignore them. Notes to my future self are a guide, not a goal.
Thereâs another benefit to stopping mid-problem: It gives our subconscious a chance to work on it. Hemingway spoke on this, too:
Donât think about it or worry about it until you start to write the next day. That way your subconscious will work on it all the time. If you think about it consciously or worry about it you will kill it and your brain will be tired before you start.
When I first read this quote, I flinched at the idea of having my brain âwork on it all the time.â But after reading the book Rest by Alex Pang, I learned that our directed cognition (active mind) gets valuable rest even when our subconscious continues to work on problems.
From my note on deliberate rest: âIt turns out that your best creative work is likely to come when you spend less time working.â Give yourself a break, and youâll likely get more done.
Leave a little work unfinished, and write a note before you go. Youâll get some rest tonight, and hit the ground running tomorrow.
Quick Links
Procreate drawing ideas for beginners â A great piece from my friend Nate filled with inspirational drawing prompts. (BTW: Nate and I are almost done filming for our upcoming self-paced course. Sign up for updates at writersdraw.com.)
Put it on the crazy pile â âI figured that it would be a good idea to keep track of my ideas in order to see whether any specific trends emerged ⌠Whenever I had an idea, it went in there; just a few lines, appended to be top of the file. What I did not anticipate was how freeing the whole experience turned out to be!â Writing is an act of liberationâwrite to let the things go, to peel the onion of your mind.
Why we crave software with style over branding â âSoftware has become so integrated into our lives that it is no longer simply a utility. Within this new state of the world, style communicates the softwareâs values and signals the type of person for whom it is intended â something that many tech brands today consistently fail to do.â
Prince of Egypt
Iâll leave you with some art from one of my favorite animated films, Prince of Egypt, courtesy of Character Design References. The brilliance and beauty of this film cannot be overstated. I enjoy it more and more every time I watch it.
Considering pairing these pictures with the soundtrack from the film, scored by none other than Hans Zimmer. My favorite is the heart-wrenching River Lullaby.