Why I Stopped Rushing My Writing
I used to rush my writing.
Not because anyone asked me to — but because I felt an invisible pressure to keep up. To publish something. To not fall behind an imaginary schedule.
That pressure quietly damaged my relationship with writing.
I noticed that rushed pieces felt empty. They sounded fine on the surface, but they didn’t reflect what I actually believed. I was finishing sentences before I had fully understood them myself.
Read more: Why I Write About SaaS and Growth - My Perspective as Peesh Chopra
So I slowed down.
Slowing down felt uncomfortable at first. Fewer posts. Longer gaps. More unfinished drafts sitting quietly. But something important changed — I started enjoying the process again.
I gave myself permission to think before writing.
That patience improved everything: confidence, consistency, and honesty. Writing stopped feeling like performance and started feeling like work I could stand behind.
This shift didn’t make me more productive. It made me more grounded.
I later explored this idea from a professional perspective — why clarity outlasts speed and how thoughtful writing builds trust over time — in a separate essay.
👉 Read the professional article here:
Why Clarity Matters More Than Speed in Writing - Peesh Chopra
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