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September 13, 2022 by Nina Amir Leave a Comment

5 Seconds can Get You Blogging Even When You Don’t Feel Like It

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blog when you don't feel like itI know you love blogging, but I bet you have days when you just don’t feel like writing, and so you don’t publish a post. After all, most bloggers have off days, right? Or maybe you keep telling yourself you’ll write but find reasons not to do so. All writers procrastinate sometimes, right?

Off days and procrastination might be facts of life for some bloggers but not for productive ones. They write and publish posts even when they don’t feel like it or find themselves inclined to do something else instead.

To write consistently, you need a strategy that gets you writing every time. And I know one that is proven to work for anyone and anything, including blogging.

Five Seconds to Action

Apply the 5 Second Rule. (No, not the one about eating food after it falls on the ground.) Launch yourself into a writing period by saying or thinking, “5–4–3–2–1-GO!” Then write (or get your post ready so you can hit “publish”).

Don’t discount this strategy because it sounds too simple. The rule will help you go from I don’t feel like writing to I’ll write anyway or from Maybe I’ll eat (fold laundry, watch the news, or whatever your preferred procrastination method) before I write a post to I’ll write a post first. It will transform you from an unproductive to a productive blogger.

Within five seconds of thinking, “I really should write and publish a post today,” you must take action. Put your fingers on the keyboard and write. Don’t wait until six seconds, two minutes, or an hour have passed to write. If you do, it’s improbable you’ll compose a word.

Write no more than five seconds after the thought of writing a post comes into your head. Write no more than five seconds after the alarm on your calendar lets you know you’ve scheduled time to compose a post.

Off days and procrastination might be facts of life for some bloggers but not for productive ones.

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What Happens if You Wait Too Long to Start Writing

After those five seconds are up, your brain begins doing what it does naturally—providing lots of reasons and excuses for not writing a blog post. You’ve probably heard them all, including:

  • “You can do it tomorrow.”
  • “You don’t feel well today, so take the day off.”
  • “Your to-do list is huge! Knock a few items off the list before you write.”
  • “You’ll never succeed as a blogger or writer, so why bother?”
  • “You really need to do the laundry.”
  • “Writing and blogging are hard…you aren’t up to the job.”

But if you move to your desk or, better yet, put your fingers on the keyboard within five seconds of thinking you “should write” or “It’s time to write a blog post,” you don’t give your mind a chance to provide reasons and excuses for not writing. Therefore, you will write…and end up with a finished post.

Within five seconds of thinking, “I really should write and publish a post today,” you must take action. Put your fingers on the keyboard and write.

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The Five-Second Rule for Bloggers

The five-second rule is not a strategy I devised. It was created by Mel Robbins, author of The Five Second Rule. Robbins claims the rule is the secret to changing anything about your life.

You can use it to break any bad habit, interrupt self-doubt and negative self-talk, and push yourself to take the actions that will change your life—like writing daily or publishing a post weekly…no matter what. Using this simple rule helps you increase motivation, decrease self-doubt, and take action toward your blogging goals.

Robbins, a lawyer, explains the rule this way: “If you have an instinct to act on a goal, you must physically move within five seconds, or your brain will kill it. The moment you feel an instinct or a desire to act on a goal or a commitment, use the rule.”

And how do you use it? “When you feel yourself hesitate before doing something that you know you should do, count 5–4–3–2–1-GO and move towards action,” Robbins explains.

Robbins began to use the five-second rule as a way of getting out of bed at a time that was both difficult for her and her family. Inspired by a rocket launch she noticed on TV, the process is simple and mimics such a launch. Simply count backward from five to one and immediately launch yourself into action at the end of the count—before the mind creates a reason not to act.

Launch yourself into a writing period by saying or thinking, “5–4–3–2–1-GO!” Then write.

Click To Tweet

Writers Who Hesitate Don’t Write

You know the saying, “He who hesitates is lost.” Well, the same goes for bloggers. If you hesitate, you won’t write…you will get lost in all the reasons why you should do something—anything—else. Your brain will make sure of that.

Robbins says, “Hesitation is the kiss of death. You might hesitate for just a nanosecond, but that’s all it takes. That one small hesitation triggers a mental system that’s designed to stop you. And it happens in less than—you guessed it—five seconds.”

So, if you aren’t blogging as consistently as you’d like (or at all) or too often you don’t write a blog post because you don’t feel inspired, motivated, or in the mood, stop hesitating. As soon as you think about writing or blogging, use the rule. Count backward and then take action.

Make 5–4–3–2–1 WRITE! your new strategy. And watch your blogging productivity and consistency blast off like a rocket.

Have you tried the 5 Second Rule to get yourself to write a blog post? I’d love to know if it worked for you, so tell me in a comment below. And please share this post with a friend or on social media. Also, if you need some support writing consistently and productively, reach out” or join the Nonfiction Writers’ University for group Author Coaching.

Photo courtesy of evgenyatamanenko.

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Filed Under: Success Strategies Tagged With: blog a book, blog anyway, blog consistently, blogging, don't feel like blogging, five second rule, personal growth

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About Nina Amir

Nina Amir, the Inspiration to Creation Coach, inspires writers to create published products and careers as authors as well as to achieve their goals and fulfill their purpose and potential.

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