When you start a creative project but don’t finish, the experience drags you down. Worst of all is when you never decisively abandon a project, instead allowing it to fade into forgetfulness. The fades add up; they become a gloomy haze that whispers, you’re not the kind of person who DOES things.
When you start and finish, by contrast — and it can be a project of any scope: a 24-hour comic, a one-page short story, truly anything — it is powerful fuel that goes straight back into the tank. When a project is finished, it exits the realm of “this is gonna be great” and becomes instead something you (and perhaps others) can actually evaluate. Even if that evaluation is disastrous, it is also, I will insist, thrilling and productive. A project finished is the pump of a piston, preparing the engine for the next one.
Recent articles
- Qwen2.5-Coder-32B is an LLM that can code well that runs on my Mac - 12th November 2024
- Visualizing local election results with Datasette, Observable and MapLibre GL - 9th November 2024
- Project: VERDAD - tracking misinformation in radio broadcasts using Gemini 1.5 - 7th November 2024