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Writing Is Thinking

Thinking Truly Begins When You Write

Our brains operate in "perpetual approximation mode" by default — drifting vaguely among fragments of ideas, rumors, and past arguments without deep exploration. Writing forces structure onto this disordered thinking, compelling us to organize by context and logic. In the process of writing, mental "clutter" gets sorted and removed. Blind spots, biases, and false assumptions invisible when floating in your head take shape and become visible the moment you write them down. Writing and reading reveal distortions in emotions and thoughts we hadn't even noticed, serving as a means to uncover flawed ideas that have been deeply rooted and unconsciously manipulating our emotions and beliefs. We may realize that new ideas were actually illusions, or that others' intentions and motivations were misinterpreted. Writing not only connects bigger ideas but also exposes errors and irrationality in disconnected thoughts. Stephen King said "Writing about yourself is like sticking a branch into clear river water and stirring up the mud at the bottom." Sometimes writing is the only way to truly start thinking.

Step-by-Step

1

Pick one recurring thought/emotion/belief and write it out quickly and roughly

2

When you hit blocks or discomfort while writing, dig into that feeling itself

3

Pour out all tangled thoughts, then rearrange by context and logic

4

Re-read your writing and mark blind spots, biases, and false assumptions

5

After writing, like a child endlessly asking "Why?", repeatedly question "Why do I think/feel/believe this way?" — writing solidifies thinking and enables critical self-examination

6

Make actual decisions/actions based on organized thinking

Pros

  • Mental chaos becomes structured, enabling clear thinking
  • Unconscious biases and false assumptions become recognizable
  • Achieve connections and depth impossible through thinking alone
  • Stays in memory even without re-reading

Cons

  • Written thoughts may reveal uncomfortable truths different from expectations
  • The process of digging deep can be emotionally draining

Use Cases

When thoughts are scattered before an important decision When recurring thoughts or emotions cause distress Organizing problems in writing during code refactoring/debugging (Rubber Duck technique) Morning Pages — 3 pages of stream-of-consciousness writing every morning