I Don’t Believe Writer’s Block Exists

This year, I set a goal to write at least one thousand words every day. So far, I’ve managed to stick to it. On most days, I wrote even more. Writing stories for my books and articles for this website give me a strong reason to keep going—and once you do it long enough, habit takes over.

I don’t even think about whether I should write today; I just do it, because I’ve done it long enough that it has become a natural part of my daily routine.

So, does writer’s block exist? I don’t think so. At least I’ve never experienced it.

If I look at writing from the perspective of quantity, the only times I get stuck are when I start thinking too much about quality. Not every article I write and not every page of a book is perfect. Sometimes I even write complete trash.

But writing trash can still lead to quality. Here’s why: if you can’t produce something good today and you stop writing, you certainly won’t create anything of value tomorrow. But if you keep writing—even if it’s garbage—quantity will lead to quality almost automatically because you keep putting words on paper.

If you try writing 1K a day for an entire year, you will learn something about writing. Even if you only learn it subconsciously. And this will improve your quality afterwards. So just writing more and more will make you better. You only have to stick with it and never give up.

Here are a few guidelines I use to continue writing daily:

  • When I write fiction, I follow one rule only: just write, without editing. Editing is only allowed after the writing part is finished.
  • When I get an idea for a story, I write it down, no matter whether it seems good or not. When I finish a story, I review my swipe file and choose the next idea that’s promising enough for a book or a blog post.
  • When I write non-fiction, I always create a simple outline before I start which are basically just sub-headlines. Writing then becomes a matter of connecting the headlines I planned in advance.
  • I keep a swipe file for non-fiction as well, so I never run out of blog post ideas. It already contains more concepts than I could possibly turn into articles in my lifetime.
  • Use ChatGPT for feedback: You can’t type in “write me a book” and expect good results. But you can use ChatGPT as a Beta reader who is always available and delivers quick and targeted feedback.

These guidelines have helped me avoid writer’s block entirely. I can confidently say I haven’t experienced it once this year. And I’m convinced you won’t either if you follow these four simple rules.

Jean-Claude Van Johnson (Movie/Show Review #9)

It’s a bit older now, but what a great show it is. Unfortunately, it was cancelled after just one season. Still, the six episodes we did get are very entertaining and surprisingly funny.

Jean-Claude Van Damme was one of my favorite childhood action stars, but he went off track in the mid-90s due to cocaine — as he has openly admitted. After being pushed out of Hollywood, he spent quite a while making direct-to-DVD and B-movies in Europe. But every now and then, there’s a real gem hidden among the forgettable stuff he has made after 1999.

JCVD, the movie, was a fantastic surprise — and Jean-Claude Van Johnson is as well.

The show is very self-referential and pokes fun at Van Damme’s most famous movies while still honoring them. The humor is nostalgic and meta; half the jokes are hard to understand if you haven’t seen those films — Timecop, for example.

But if you grew up with ’80s and ’90s action movies, the show is pure entertainment. And if you’re a Jean-Claude fan, you’ll definitely laugh out loud many times.

Author in Progress Report – November 2025

Last month things improved again, but I’m still not sure whether I’ve reached the point where steady growth is guaranteed as long as I keep doing what I’m doing. I’d describe the current state as a kind of internet limbo.


Website

I kept my daily blogging streak going for another full month. It did lead to an increase in traffic, but I’m not convinced it’s real traffic. Lately, I’ve been getting spam comments, so maybe my URL just ended up in some scammer database, causing an influx of bot traffic.

Numbers for November:

  • Pageviews: 468 (+37%)
  • Total users: 239 (+11%)

On some days, there’s a nice spike in traffic. Today, though, it dropped. I hope that daily blogging will help and bring consistent growth every 30 days, but again: it’s hard to interpret the data when I don’t get many real comments.

Maybe once the scammers move on—since I delete all their comments—traffic will drop again. We’ll see.


Newsletter

This is why I’m not convinced the traffic increase is real: I didn’t get a single new newsletter subscriber in November. I checked the signup form with different browsers and systems—it should be set up correctly.

But if everything works and the traffic increase is genuine, why aren’t any new subscribers signing up?

If you’re reading this, please consider joining the newsletter here: Endless by Michael Brig. You’ll get a free book and an email whenever I give something away for free on Amazon.


Free Books

I published another short story collection last week called Killtime (US – DE).

It turned out to be my biggest success so far in the STORY52 project, where I give away short story books for free on Amazon to attract new readers.

I had 45 German and 8 English downloads. Nothing spectacular, but hopefully some of those 50 readers will check out my website or YouTube at some point.

This makes it 9 out of 52 stories already published.


Writing

Total, massive, unadulterated success. I finished writing my STORY52 project, which means I can focus on full-length novels next year. So far, I’ve published 9 of the 52 short story books; the rest will come out whenever I find the time to edit, translate, and design covers for them. But the first drafts are done and I can guarantee more releases regularly now to have all 52 stories published in 2026 (maybe 2027).

With this project wrapped up, I might attempt to write 12 novels in 12 months next year. That’s an average of only 2,000 words per day—something I might be able to manage, as I already wrote that much in sum (novels + short stories).

Project Updates 2025

  • Forever – Released in July (US / DE)
  • Endless – Free book for newsletter subscribers; released in September (get it here)
  • 17 Series – Editing of Part 1 is 95% done; translation and cover design are next | target release: Christmas 2025
  • Therapy – Written; planned release early 2026
  • Crowley – Written; planned release summer 2026
  • Influencer – Still outlining; goal to finish writing early 2026
  • Smash the Patriarchy – New novel I’ll write in December; goal: 2K words per day to see if I can complete it from idea to first draft in one month

While I jumped ship on my Influencer book for a bit, I also had an epiphany about writing. I’m currently defining iron writing rules for myself—rules I must follow no matter what. One of them will be: never start a new project until the previous one is finished.

Publishing Part 1 of the 17 Series this December is still my main focus for the next 31 days.


X/Twitter

I share my links and write movie reviews whenever I feel like it. But I avoid everything else because of the heavy censorship in Germany. Last month, the police actually raided someone for calling government workers “parasites.” No joke—that really happened in the land of the not-so-free Germans.

Still, I use Twitter daily to read and stay informed. You can follow me here: @michael_brig


Instagram

No real changes—I’m still just posting book covers for now.
Follow me here: Michael Brig IG


YouTube

My tutorial channel is running smoothly. Things look promising for 2026.

The other channels, though… I get almost no views due to shadowbanning. It’s really demotivating, and I think I’ll simply do less on YouTube next year, as there’s currently no real potential for growth within the system.


Conclusion

Overall, things are improving, but when it comes to finding readers for my books, I still feel like I haven’t made much progress. Sure, 2025 was meant to be a year of testing and experimenting, but I secretly hoped to at least find a handful of readers who would follow my work regularly—and I don’t think I’ve achieved that yet.

One more month to go in 2025, and then my first full year of trying to become a real author begins in January 2026.

I hope you’ll stay with me on this journey.

Politicians Sound Like CEOs

Not long ago, Democrats were convinced that Kamala Harris was the best candidate in the history of democracy. The media praised her competence, intelligence, and experience.

The same thing happens in Germany. Government politicians talk about how amazing the country is and how great their achievements are—every single one of them. The current president even said, “We live in the best Germany that ever existed,” just a couple of weeks ago.

But it turned out Kamala Harris was one of the weakest candidates in modern history. And it turned out that the last several German governments have run the country so deeply into the ground that only massive new debt can ensure pensions are still paid out next year.

So why do politicians and pundits keep talking about how wonderful everything is when reality is the complete opposite?

The answer might be: Politics is like the stock market. And politicians are just CEOs.

Not long ago, Germany was shaken by a huge scandal involving a company called Wirecard. It was essentially a PayPal clone with German roots, reporting massive profits in the Asian digital payments market. The company rose quickly, making it into the DAX—the German equivalent of the S&P 500. Politicians proudly presented Wirecard as a “tech success made in Germany” and praised its two leading figures as symbols of German innovation.

But everything Wirecard reported turned out to be a lie.

The company inflated its stock price with fake financial reports and transactions that never happened, all while being possibly connected to Russian and Chinese intelligence networks. Wirecard collapsed just as fast as it had risen.

During its rise, Wirecard’s CEO constantly celebrated the company’s numbers in the spotlight. His second-in-command was hailed as a young tech genius—the next “Steve Jobs,” as they always say. Both enjoyed the fame. Even when the first reports surfaced claiming Wirecard might be nothing more than a bubble, they stayed calm and talked about a bright future.

When it all fell apart, one of them vanished somewhere in the East—possibly Russia—beyond the reach of Western law enforcement. The other, the official CEO, still insists the company wasn’t a fraud and claims he could have saved it if only he’d been given more time.

In short: nobody in charge ever took responsibility. They never admitted any wrongdoing. They didn’t even acknowledge the reality of the fraud after the bubble burst. Not. A. Single. Time.

And isn’t that exactly what we see in politics today?

Politicians always talk about how great things are—even when they’re not. As long as they’re in charge, everything is supposedly perfect. And when they’re out of power, they insist everything will be perfect if we just vote them back in.

It’s like stock-price management: never admit mistakes, never discuss problems, always insist everything is fine—because anything else would drive the “stock price” down.

In politics, we voters are the stock price. And they try to lie, deceive, and manipulate their way into higher voter numbers at all cost. Even after their bubble—or an entire country—has burst, they still pretend everything was fine.

It’s pure psychopathy. Pure stock-market bullshit.

Collect All Story Ideas – Especially the Bad Ones

I keep a swipe file on my computer, and I have physical notebooks scattered everywhere. I even keep one next to my bed in case an idea hits me right after waking up.

My swipe file has grown to more than 300 story ideas by now. I’ll never be able to work on all of them—and to be honest, some of them aren’t even worth developing. But I still collect every single one.

There’s a good reason for that: over the years, I’ve realized that different parts of my mind seem to wake up depending on which stage of writing I’m in. To make the part I currently need work best, I have to quiet down all the others.

For example: The most creative part is needed for generating new ideas. But during editing, I need a completely different mindset, because the creative side is terrible at judging what I’ve written. Outlining requires yet another area—a blend of creativity and critical thinking.

When I don’t let one specific part take over, they all start talking over each other. And when that happens, nothing works: idea generation, outlining, editing… everything just falls apart. Too many cooks spoil the broth.

That’s why I collect ideas without judging them at all. I don’t rate them or evaluate them—I just write them down.

Only later, once I’ve finished a book and I’m deciding what to work on next, do I go through my swipe file and rate the ideas.

I’m convinced that if I tried to generate and judge ideas at the same time, I would discard most of them, assuming they weren’t good enough. Eventually, I’d end up with no ideas at all, because the constant cycle of generating an idea, rating it poorly, and throwing it away would discourage the creative part of my mind from offering ideas in the first place.

By making it a habit to let ideas emerge freely and uncritically—and by writing them down no matter how good or bad they seem—I’ve allowed the creative part of my brain to express itself without hesitation.

Of course, everyone works differently. But if you’re thinking about writing your own stories, I recommend trying this approach: Keep a notebook with you at all times and jot down whatever comes to mind while watching a movie, reading a book, daydreaming, waiting at the doctor’s office, or listening to music. I’m pretty sure that when you look back over your notes after a month, you’ll find at least one idea in your swipe file that’s worth developing.