Blank page fear? Shrink it. The 10-Word Rule kills overthinking by forcing you to start with one sentence that’s short enough to finish instantly.
The Rule
- Write 10 words or fewer about what you want to say.
- Stop. Read it out loud once.
- Only expand if you feel momentum — otherwise, keep the 10-word version.
Example
Before: “I need to explain why consistency matters in creative work, but it keeps sounding generic.”
After: “Consistency builds trust when talent is invisible.”
Why It Works
- Forces clarity. 10 words cut away fluff fast.
- Reduces pressure. Anyone can write 10 words — no perfection needed.
- Builds momentum. Tiny completions lead to flow.
Tools & Resources
- Bear Notes — clean minimal writing app for short text bursts.
- Simplenote — distraction-free quick capture.
- Notion — store and tag your 10-word sparks.
Tip for monetization: link each tool with your affiliate tracking; keep one call-to-action per tool.
Bonus Tip
When you get stuck mid-writing, return to the 10-Word Rule. Write one mini-summary sentence that re-centers your idea — it’s your anchor.
FAQ
Can I use more than 10 words?
Of course. The rule is a start line, not a limit. Begin small — expand once the words flow naturally.
Does this work for emails and social posts?
Yes. The 10-word start becomes your hook, then you add depth below it. It’s a universal writing primer.

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