Do you ever sit down to write only to realize you've forgotten that brilliant idea you had in the shower? Or maybe you've captured dozens of notes at conferences that are now buried under layers of paper on your desk, slowly dying from neglect?If you've ever felt like you struggle more with starting than with actual writing, this episode is for you.Kathi Lipp and Roger Lipp dive into the unsexy but life-changing truth about writing productivity: boring systems are what actually get the work done. Not inspiration. Not waiting for the perfect moment. Just simple, repeatable systems that remove the decision fatigue that keeps so many talented writers stuck.What You'll Discover in This EpisodeWhy writers don't quit because they lack talent—they quit because decision fatigue is brutalThe difference between having a writing problem and having an "idea leak"Simple capture systems you can set up in 10 minutes (from one-note apps to shower crayons!)Why the weekly review is the bridge between "someday" and "scheduled"Three powerful questions to ask during your weekly reviewHow to make your next step so small it feels almost insultingNon-icky ways to use AI for brainstorming without letting it write for youThe power of accountability partnerships for processing ideasThe System in One SentenceCapture daily. Review weekly. Next tiny step today.That's it. That's the whole system. And it works because it removes the mental load of constantly deciding when, what, and how to write.Your Homework (Do This Now!)Take 10 minutes right now to:Set up your capture system (a notes app, a notepad, whatever works for you)Put it on your home screen for one-tap accessSchedule your 15-minute weekly review on your calendarThen head over to the Writing at the Red House Facebook group and tell us what capture system you chose and what day you picked for your review. We'll cheer you on!Key TakeawaysBoring means you don't have to decide—like brushing your teeth, your body already knows what to doYour brain relaxes when it knows the scheduleCapture without review is just hope that dies on your deskMost writers don't avoid writing—they avoid startingMake your goals so small they feel insulting: open the doc, paste the outline, write a terrible first paragraph
Do you ever sit down to write only to realize you've forgotten that brilliant idea you had in the shower? Or maybe you've captured dozens of notes at conferences that are now buried under layers of paper on your desk, slowly dying from neglect?
If you've ever felt like you struggle more with starting than with actual writing, this episode is for you.
Kathi Lipp and Roger Lipp dive into the unsexy but life-changing truth about writing productivity: boring systems are what actually get the work done. Not inspiration. Not waiting for the perfect moment. Just simple, repeatable systems that remove the decision fatigue that keeps so many talented writers stuck.
Why writers don't quit because they lack talent—they quit because decision fatigue is brutal
The difference between having a writing problem and having an "idea leak"
Simple capture systems you can set up in 10 minutes (from one-note apps to shower crayons!)
Why the weekly review is the bridge between "someday" and "scheduled"
Three powerful questions to ask during your weekly review
How to make your next step so small it feels almost insulting
Non-icky ways to use AI for brainstorming without letting it write for you
The power of accountability partnerships for processing ideas
Capture daily. Review weekly. Next tiny step today.
That's it. That's the whole system. And it works because it removes the mental load of constantly deciding when, what, and how to write.
Take 10 minutes right now to:
Set up your capture system (a notes app, a notepad, whatever works for you)
Put it on your home screen for one-tap access
Schedule your 15-minute weekly review on your calendar
Then head over to the Writing at the Red House Facebook group and tell us what capture system you chose and what day you picked for your review. We'll cheer you on!
Boring means you don't have to decide—like brushing your teeth, your body already knows what to do
Your brain relaxes when it knows the schedule
Capture without review is just hope that dies on your desk
Most writers don't avoid writing—they avoid starting
Make your goals so small they feel insulting: open the doc, paste the outline, write a terrible first paragraph
Welcome to The Writing at the Red House Podcast where we gather at the table to break bread and tell tales with some of our favorite writers and speakers. Our heart is to equip and encourage men and women to be the communicators God has created them to be.