I've stopped writing for a general audience and forced myself to just write to clarify my general thoughts about things and I feel like it's helped immensely.<p>Of course you're writing with the goal of making a blog and I can keep all my slop to myself. But I find it helpful to have the attitude of "I'll keep writing and rewriting the same thoughts over and over and over again", because chances are the good ideas are the ones you feel like you have an intuitive grasp on but need to work out the kinks to.<p>Obviously my communication needs refinement and work. But I've noticed just getting to that core problem solving aspect of your thoughts is more important than your prose.<p>---<p>At least for me, I'm so used to writing 1-shot responses, such as this very comment right now, and then refining it iteratively, and sure, if I improved my writing skills technically, I could write a more refined comment. But that doesn't change the fact that I didn't think *that* hard about my comment critically, I just wrote whatever feeling I came up with right now. And that's fine - tradeoffs in life, etc.<p>But if you have a truly interesting idea, even if it's just to you - which chances are you DO, you're just not looking at a fine enough granularity - work at it, refine it, idk.<p>(for me, it was finally accepting that hey, when I think something might be wrong about the world, perhaps I should try to explain that and put it out there into thought, instead of just repressing it and saying "it's probably just me being dumb")<p>---<p>After a re-read through of stuff I'm often still very unsatisfied and feel like I want to delete the comment; often in the past I would have several iterations of a comment and just delete it over and over again.<p>I dunno, I think just having all versions is valuable, ideas are still going to always be infinitely more dimensional than text could ever be (not to mention the layer of perception that goes with it). Now I'll save all of those snippets somewhere.<p>Probably 99% of those little snippets won't ever get read again, but the act of preserving these little random notes and essays somewhere, at least for me, I feel like jogs my memory again when I need to sit down and read something and get re-contextualized.