The chapter I wrote, deleted, wrote again, deleted again, and finally kept

Melissa

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Apr 17, 2026
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Chapter three nearly broke me. I wrote it four times. Four complete drafts. Each time, I deleted everything and started over. The first draft was too theoretical. No evidence. Just me thinking. The second draft was too evidence-heavy.

Quotes everywhere. No interpretation. The third draft was a compromise. Still didn't work. I was ready to quit. I called my mom. She's not an academic. She's a nurse. I told her I was failing. She said: "Helena, you've been working on this for three years. You're not failing. You're just stuck." Then she said something that changed everything: "When I can't figure out a patient, I stop looking at the problem and start looking at the person." I thought about that for days.

I was so focused on the chapter that I forgot why I was writing it.

What was I actually trying to say? I stopped writing. I made tea. I sat outside. And I thought: what's the one thing I want my committee to understand? The answer came: I want them to understand that the standard interpretation is wrong. That's it. One sentence. I wrote the fourth draft around that sentence. Every paragraph asked: does this help prove that the standard interpretation is wrong? The fourth draft took two weeks. It was half as long.

But it was better. ❤️
 
Helena (sorry, Melissa — your mom called you Helena so now I'm attached), that "one sentence" trick is the real secret. I do something similar. I write my thesis statement on a sticky note and put it on my monitor. Every paragraph I write, I look at the sticky note. If the paragraph doesn't connect, I delete it. Saves so much time. Your mom sounds like a treasure.
 
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