
Developing A New Practice: Getting Started
The first of a series of tracks using my experience of using very short sessions to develop a daily yoga practice as an example of what developing a writing practice might look like. I don't care if y...
15 Aug 20252min

Are deadlines helping or hurting?
Deadlines are a common way to motivate yourself to write. But if they are creating resistance instead, you need a different strategy.Read the post here: https://jovanevery.co.uk/are-deadlines-helping-...
15 Aug 20253min

Small steps yield big results
Establishing a habit of writing regularly is not easy. Starting with 15-minutes a day is a good way to establish a habit. This track talks about why. And yes, once established, you can extend the amou...
15 Aug 20254min

If you had one more week
If you discovered that your semester started a week later than expected, what would you do? What if you decided to use that week for writing? This track includes some thoughts on the transition from s...
15 Aug 20255min

How much writing can you do in term time
It's important to have realistic expectations about how much writing you can do when you are also teaching. Here's how to do it.Read the post here: https://jovanevery.co.uk/term-time-writing/For more ...
15 Aug 20253min

It *is* possible to write in term time
There is no way you can do all the writing you want and need to do if you only write during the summer and your sabbaticals. It’s hard to write during term time. But it is possible. The trick is to fi...
15 Aug 20258min

15 minutes a day
One of the earliest things I wrote about writing for 15-minutes a day drew on Robert Boice’s work and suggests experimenting with 15-minute sessions. Read the post here: https://jovanevery.co.uk/15-mi...
15 Aug 20256min

The value of experiments
The only way you can figure out if writing for very short periods of time will work for you, is to try it. In this track, I talk about designing experiments. Read the post here: https://jovanevery.co....
15 Aug 20253min



















