7 Reasons to Write Every Day and 7 Tips to Help You Do It!
71It’s hard to write every day, but when you do, it’s benefits are enormous. It’s not easy squeezing in that time to write. There’s also the question of what to write about, because inspiration does not strike us every day. However, ideas and thoughts do pass through the mind every day and with practice, you’ll learn to use them to inspire you - every day.
This isn't just for people who write for a living, because obviously, they have to write. But even for the regular person who has a non-writing related occupation, writing something about anything every day has so many benefits!
Seven reasons to write every day
1. It makes you a better thinker. They say you should “write, not think” but when you’re writing, you are thinking at the same time. You’re thinking about what to write, when to write it, how to write it.
2. It makes you more organized. Every day, feelings, opinions, ideas, and other things pass through your mind. When you’re writing them down, you’re organizing these ideas in your mind into words on paper.
3. It improves your communication skills. Elaborating on the idea above, thoughts in your head don’t always translate well into words. Some things are just hard to explain. However, as you write more, you’ll get better at communicating your thoughts and ideas for others to clearly understand.
4. It lets YOU remember YOUR ideas better. Maybe you don’t need the rest of the world to know what you’re thinking. But sometimes, you just need to remember it, without keeping the thought floating in your mind. They say that if you write something down, the odds of you remembering it are significantly increased, even if you don’t reread what you wrote.
5.It makes you a better reader. If you write, you will be able to appreciate a text you are reading from a reader's and a writer's perspective, and they aren't always the same.
6. It inspires you. Writing a little will inspire you to write a little more. One idea will inspire many others. And who knows, one of those ideas just may be one that will change your life, or at least how you see it.
7. You get better at it. In one month, your writing will improve drastically. In one year, your writing will get much, much better. It's not necessarily about what you write about, it's how you write it. If you're writing to an audience, you'll get better at captivating that audience. If you're writing privately just for yourself, you'll get better at making it personal. As you write more, writing will be like second nature, and words will come to you, instead of you trying for the other way around. If you keep what you write every day and keep what you've written, you can look back and see how you've grown as a writer.
Links related to writing
- one word. so little time.
A simple writing exercise in which the user is given one word and sixty seconds to write whatever that word inspires. - Writing.com - An online writers and readers community
- 10 Reasons to Write and Publish Every Day by Liz Strauss
- One Two Fiver: A writer's warm-up
- 31 Ways to Find Inspiration for Your Writing
Seven tips when it comes to writing
1. You can write on whatever medium you choose. Let it be a blog, or a notebook. A series of loose leaf papers, or word documents. Poems and letters of cocktail napkins. Or a combination. Type or use a pen, it's your choice.
2. Write about anything. Your life. The world. Opinions. Ideas. Feelings. Something that you saw today. A place. An event. Love. You can write a story. A fantasy. About a dream. A letter. Anything.
3. They say you should just write and edit later, but I think it's perfectly okay to edit as you go along. Just don't be a self-editing freak, that's all. It may help to edit what you write after you take a break from that piece of work too.
4. Keep it. Maybe not all your writing, but some of it at least. I like to date all the poems and short stories I write, because when I revisit it a year later, it brings back memories of me writing that.
5. Set a goal. Some people say forcing yourself to write don't help. The truth is, however, that although you may have to force yourself to write in the beginning, you'll build that momentum and eventually write because you love it. So set a goal; it can be by length or time. Or it can be just write something, anything, even if it's just one really well written sentence that says everything it needs to. Consistency is what matters.
6. You can write however you like. It doesn't need to be boring, dry, and seemingly sophisticated. You can try out different writing styles and voices until you develop your own distinctive one. Remember that this is your writing, and it can be however you like. And you can use whatever words you choose to use.
7. Go out and live life. Make your life interesting.
Eventful. Go out and
see what there is in the world and see it from different perspectives. Detour from your normal routine, find something interesting, and write about it. Your life inspires your writing, so let them both be interesting.
And here's one more as a bonus.
8. Write down this goal.
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Comments
writing every day is an old tip but your benefits of writing every day are a great help to people who know they should write every day but don't
Good Hub, I try to write everyday. Writing gives me a feeling of accomplishment. Thanks! :)
HILLceo - I like the analogy!
Dolores Monet - Thanks.
Tom - Ahh, the sense of accomplishment. I try to do something every day that gives me a bit of that, it makes the day seem like less of a waste.
These are great tips and I am sure these will help more people write each day. Sometimes it is easy to procrastinate when I have writer's block lol.
These are excellent tips! I agree - but have to admit that I haven't been writing daily for about a month now and I really miss it. I think once you get into the habit of writing daily, you feel like something is missing when you don't!
Welcome to Hubpages! :)
Sweetie Pie - We all love to procrastinate. Maybe I'll write a hub sometime about how to get out of writers block!
amy jane - I agree, when you feel something is missing when you don't do it, that's when you know that it's become a habit. Or close to it. Which is always good.
I write when I have time, sometimes a few articles a day, sometimes only twice a week. Hubpages is my favorite place to write about anything that takes my interest.
Man how I wish I could write everyday! I always seem to come up with those ideas when I am lying in bed at night or driving and then forget them by the time I go to write something! Thanks for the advice; nice hub!
when I was in college, as a returning adult student, I had no clue how to study. Taking classes about how to teach helped me, but so did a how to study class. One of the best study tips for memory and thinking, was WRITING.
From that point on, I wrote as I listened to lectures, and those short phrases were super study notes. I wrote as I read in text books, and I wrote as I studied for memory. Thanks for this great hub about writing, you did a great job and I learned even more reasons to write. =))
The more you write the easier it gets. Thanks marisuewrites!


















HILLceo says:
9 months ago
It seems that the main focus of the piece pointed toward making goals for writing and sticking to it on a regular basis. I agree with that approach. Following a system to develop a person's writing style would help improve the writer's results over time just as training improves an athlete's performance over time. Good points.