1000 word essay that almost ended me (and how i survived) 😅

Patricia

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Last week I had a 1000 word essay due and I literally did not start it until 11pm the night before. Like, I knew about it for two whole weeks but somehow the deadline snuck up on me and suddenly I was staring at a blank Google doc with my cursor just blinking at me judgmentally. You know that feeling? When the cursor feels personally attacked by your lack of productivity? Yeah. 😭

I panicked for a solid hour. Scrolled TikTok. Ate some chips. Regretted my life choices. Then I realized I had to actually DO something. So I threw on my focus playlist and just started word vomiting. Like literally wrote whatever came to mind without caring about grammar or structure or making sense. Just word vomit everywhere. By 2am I had like 600 words of absolute nonsense but at least it was words you know?

Then I spent the next two hours actually shaping it into something readable. Cutting the dumb parts. Adding transitions. Making it sound like a human wrote it and not a sleep-deprived raccoon. 🦝 By 4am I had a finished 1000 word essay and honestly? It wasn't even that bad. I submitted it with zero confidence but got a B- and literally cried happy tears.

The moral of the story is sometimes starting is the hardest part. If you're staring at your own blank doc right now just start typing anything. You can fix it later. We've all been there. Anyone else have a last minute essay success story?
 
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The "word vomit first, shape later" method is literally what professional writers do. It's called a "zero draft" or a "shitty first draft" and it's the only way some people can work. Perfectionism is the enemy of productivity. You can't polish nothing.

Here's why your method worked:

  • You lowered the stakes (doesn't have to be good, just has to exist)
  • You separated creation from editing (different brain modes)
  • You gave yourself permission to write badly (freedom = flow)
The 2am-4am shaping phase is where the real writing happens anyway. That's when you're turning clay into pottery. But you NEED the clay first. You can't shape nothing.

Your B- is actually impressive for that timeline. Most people would have crashed and burned. You clearly have some writing instincts even when sleep-deprived.
 
One thing that helped me was realizing that perfectionism is the enemy of done. Like, if I waited until I had the perfect first sentence, I'd never write anything. So now I literally start with "this essay is about [topic] and I don't know what I'm saying yet" and just go from there. Then I delete that first line later.

Also, the focus playlist is KEY. Mine is called "panic mode" and it's just movie soundtracks. Makes me feel like I'm in a montage where I'm about to succeed against all odds.

Congrats on the B-! That's honestly impressive for a one-night stand with an essay.
 
Last week I had a 1000 word essay due and I literally did not start it until 11pm the night before. Like, I knew about it for two whole weeks but somehow the deadline snuck up on me and suddenly I was staring at a blank Google doc with my cursor just blinking at me judgmentally. You know that feeling? When the cursor feels personally attacked by your lack of productivity? Yeah. 😭

I panicked for a solid hour. Scrolled TikTok. Ate some chips. Regretted my life choices. Then I realized I had to actually DO something. So I threw on my focus playlist and just started word vomiting. Like literally wrote whatever came to mind without caring about grammar or structure or making sense. Just word vomit everywhere. By 2am I had like 600 words of absolute nonsense but at least it was words you know?

Then I spent the next two hours actually shaping it into something readable. Cutting the dumb parts. Adding transitions. Making it sound like a human wrote it and not a sleep-deprived raccoon. 🦝 By 4am I had a finished 1000 word essay and honestly? It wasn't even that bad. I submitted it with zero confidence but got a B- and literally cried happy tears.

The moral of the story is sometimes starting is the hardest part. If you're staring at your own blank doc right now just start typing anything. You can fix it later. We've all been there. Anyone else have a last minute essay success story?
The worst was a 3000 word lit review I started at 10pm. Had to be in by 8am. I literally didn't sleep, just wrote and cried and wrote and cried. Got a B somehow. Still don't know how.

The word vomit method is legit, but here's my addition: talk it out first. Open voice memos on your phone and just ramble about your topic for 10 minutes. Pretend you're explaining it to a friend. Then play it back and transcribe the useful parts. Suddenly you have raw material that's in YOUR voice, not some weird academic robot voice.

Also, pro tip for next time: write the introduction LAST. It's so much easier to introduce something that already exists. Trying to write an intro to nothing is how you end up staring at a blinking cursor for hours.

Congrats on surviving! The B- is well earned. 🎓
 
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