drafting

Break through blocks and execute first drafts. Use when the outline is done but the draft isn't happening, when writer's block strikes, when the blank page remains blank, or when progress stalls.

$ 安裝

git clone https://github.com/jwynia/the-kepler-testimonies /tmp/the-kepler-testimonies && cp -r /tmp/the-kepler-testimonies/.claude/skills/drafting ~/.claude/skills/the-kepler-testimonies

// tip: Run this command in your terminal to install the skill


name: drafting description: Break through blocks and execute first drafts. Use when the outline is done but the draft isn't happening, when writer's block strikes, when the blank page remains blank, or when progress stalls. license: MIT metadata: author: jwynia version: "1.0" domain: fiction cluster: story-sense

Drafting: Diagnostic Skill

You diagnose drafting blocks and guide writers through first draft execution. Your role is to identify why the draft isn't progressing and help writers get words on the page.

Core Principle

Drafting is discovery, not transcription.

The draft is not meant to be perfect. It's meant to exist. The goal is to produce material to revise—not to produce final prose. All first drafts are supposed to be imperfect.

"All first drafts are shit." — Attributed to Hemingway


The Fundamental Split

DraftingEditing
GenerativeEvaluative
Forward momentumBackward revision
Quantity focusQuality focus
Internal editor OFFInternal editor ON
Discovery modeRefinement mode

Critical rule: Do not edit while drafting. Move forward. Fix it later.


The Drafting States

State D1: Can't Start

Symptoms: Outline exists but draft doesn't. Blank page paralysis. Days pass without words written. Infinite "preparation" without execution.

Key Questions:

  • Is the outline too vague to write from?
  • Are expectations too high for a first draft?
  • Is there fear of the blank page?
  • Are you waiting to feel "ready"?

Common Causes:

  • Perfectionism (standards too high for first draft)
  • Anxiety (fear of judgment or failure)
  • Over-preparation (planning forever, never starting)
  • Vague outline (don't know what to write)

Interventions:

  • Write a zero draft scene with no expectations
  • Start with dialogue only (easiest to generate)
  • Write "What happens in this scene is..." and describe it
  • Set a start date and keep it regardless of readiness
  • Lower the bar: "I will write 100 bad words"

State D2: Start But Can't Continue

Symptoms: First scenes exist, then nothing. Each session produces less. The draft stalls after initial momentum. Getting stuck on specific scenes.

Key Questions:

  • Are you editing while drafting?
  • Did you stop at a dead end?
  • Is the current scene unclear?
  • Did you stop at a bad place last time?

Diagnostic Checklist:

  • Not re-reading previous work before writing
  • Moving forward, not polishing backward
  • Stopping mid-scene (not at ends)
  • Using placeholders for stuck parts

Interventions:

  • Skip to a different scene you CAN write
  • Use placeholders: [SOMETHING HAPPENS HERE]
  • Lower word count goals dramatically
  • Stop mid-sentence next time (easier to resume)
  • Disable backspace / turn off screen

State D3: Middle Stall

Symptoms: First act done, middle act impossible. The "muddle in the middle." Momentum lost. Unclear what connects beginning to end.

Key Questions:

  • Is the story working?
  • Is there a structural problem the draft is revealing?
  • Is motivation flagging because direction is unclear?
  • Do you know the ending?

Common Causes:

  • Outline was incomplete for middle section
  • Story problem discovered during drafting
  • The "long slog" between exciting beginning and end
  • Lost connection to why this story matters

Interventions:

  • Connect with the ending—write toward it
  • Review outline for structural gaps
  • Write scenes out of order (skip to climax if needed)
  • Ask: "What's the worst thing that could happen now?"
  • Take a short break, then resume with fresh eyes

State D4: Can't Finish

Symptoms: Draft is 70-90% complete, then stalls. Endless circling without reaching "THE END." Fear of completing. Adding instead of finishing.

Key Questions:

  • Is the ending unclear?
  • Is there fear of judgment once complete?
  • Has momentum been lost?
  • Are you avoiding the ending?

Why Writers Avoid Finishing:

  • Fear of evaluation (once done, it can be judged)
  • Uncertainty about what comes next
  • Ending feels inadequate
  • Attachment to the process over the product

Interventions:

  • Set a deadline and commit publicly
  • Commit to word count regardless of quality
  • Remember: a finished bad draft beats an unfinished "good" one
  • Write the ending NOW, then fill gaps
  • Accept the ending can be revised—just get something down

State D5: Draft Taking Too Long

Symptoms: Months or years on the same draft. Progress painfully slow. Daily word counts tiny. Constant revision disguised as drafting.

Key Questions:

  • Is editing happening during drafting?
  • Are word count goals too low?
  • Is perfectionism slowing progress?
  • Are you treating the first draft as final?

Diagnostic Checklist:

  • Daily word count goal exists and is met
  • Not re-reading more than last paragraph before starting
  • Not revising sentences after writing them
  • Actually drafting, not perpetual revision

Interventions:

  • Increase daily goals (500 → 1000 → 2000)
  • Time-box sessions (write for 1 hour, regardless of output)
  • Commit to speed over quality for remainder of draft
  • Track word count publicly for accountability
  • Use "dirty draft" philosophy: it's supposed to be bad

State D6: Draft Reveals Story Problem

Symptoms: Draft is progressing but something feels wrong. Story isn't working. Outline seemed good but execution exposes flaws. Reluctance to continue because foundation is broken.

Key Questions:

  • Is it a drafting problem or a story problem?
  • What specific element feels wrong?
  • Can you push through and fix in revision?
  • Does the outline need adjustment?

Options When Draft Goes Wrong:

  1. Push through anyway — Fix in revision (fastest)
  2. Pause and re-outline — If fundamentally broken (significant)
  3. Follow the draft — Let story go where it wants (discovery)
  4. Write both versions — Compare later (exploratory)

Interventions:

  • Distinguish: is it prose quality or story structure?
  • If prose: push through (that's what revision is for)
  • If structure: take one day to re-outline, then continue
  • If character: write the scene wrong, mark it, keep going
  • Trust that revision exists for exactly this purpose

The Internal Editor Problem

"Writer's block is a non-medical condition primarily associated with writing, in which an author is either unable to produce new work or experiences a creative slowdown."

The Neurological Reality

Under stress, the brain shifts from cortex (creative) to limbic system (survival). Creative processes are literally impaired by anxiety about the draft.

Silencing the Editor

Techniques:

  • Write with screen off
  • Use a different tool (pen, typewriter, different app)
  • Write in a "junk" file meant to be deleted
  • Set a timer and don't stop until it rings
  • Dictate instead of type
  • Write at a different time of day

Drafting Methods

The Daily Quota

Set a daily word count and meet it regardless of quality.

TargetPaceAnnual Output
500 words/daySustainable180,000 words
1,000 words/dayModerate365,000 words
2,000 words/dayIntensive730,000 words

Principle: Consistent small amounts accumulate.

The Session Method

Write in focused sessions, not word counts:

  • Pomodoro: 25 min on, 5 min off
  • Power hour: 60 min focused drafting
  • Sprint: 15-30 min bursts with breaks

The Scene Method

Don't write "the novel"—write individual scenes. Each session completes one scene.

Advantage: Discrete achievable goals.

The Out-of-Order Method

Write scenes you're excited about, regardless of position. Assemble later.

Advantage: Maintains enthusiasm; bypasses stuck points.

Free Writing

From Natalie Goldberg:

  1. Set time limit (5-20 minutes)
  2. Keep hand moving—no pausing
  3. Don't correct anything
  4. If stuck, write "I don't know what to write"
  5. When done, mark passages worth keeping

Breaking Specific Blocks

When Completely Stuck

  1. Change location (different room, outside, café)
  2. Change tool (pen/keyboard, different app)
  3. Lower the bar ("I'll just write 100 words")
  4. Skip ahead to a scene you can write
  5. Write about being stuck (free write about the block)
  6. Talk it through (explain scene aloud, transcribe)
  7. Set a timer (even 10 min of forced writing)

When a Scene Won't Work

  • Write it badly on purpose
  • Write only the dialogue
  • Summarize what needs to happen: [Character confronts villain about X]
  • Skip it with placeholder and move on
  • Ask: does this scene need to exist?

When You Hate What You've Written

  • That's normal. Keep going.
  • Don't re-read until draft is done
  • Remember: you're generating raw material
  • The revision skill exists for exactly this reason

The Writing Environment

Physical

  • Dedicated space if possible
  • Minimal distractions
  • Consistent location (habit trigger)

Digital

  • Distraction-free writing tool
  • Internet blocked
  • Notifications silenced
  • Phone in another room

Temporal

  • Consistent time of day
  • Morning often works (before world intrudes)
  • Specific time matters less than consistency

Anti-Patterns

The Endless Outliner

Plans forever, never drafts. Fix: Set a start date. Outline is done when the deadline arrives.

The Sentence Polisher

Revises each sentence before writing the next. Fix: Turn off screen. Disable backspace. Forward only.

The Perfect First-Drafter

Believes first draft should be near-final. Fix: Read about professional writers' terrible first drafts.

The Mood Writer

Only writes when "inspired." Fix: Professionals write on schedule. Inspiration follows action.

The Middle Abandoner

Starts many drafts, finishes none. Fix: Finish one bad draft before starting another.

The Comparison Maker

Compares first draft to published novels. Fix: Published novels had many drafts. Compare first to first.


Diagnostic Process

When a writer comes with drafting problems:

1. Identify the State

  • Can't start? → D1
  • Starts but stalls? → D2
  • Middle stuck? → D3
  • Can't finish? → D4
  • Taking too long? → D5
  • Story problem emerging? → D6

2. Check for Internal Editor

Are they drafting or editing-in-disguise?

  • Re-reading before writing?
  • Revising sentences after writing them?
  • Standards too high for first draft?

3. Check the Method

Is there a system?

  • Daily goal (words or time)?
  • Consistent schedule?
  • Appropriate scope per session?

4. Recommend Interventions

Based on identified state and causes.


Integration with story-sense

story-sense StateMaps to Drafting State
State 3: Outline complete, draft not startedD1
State 3.5: Draft in progress but stalledD2-D5

When to Hand Off

  • To scene-sequencing: When stuck scene is structural
  • To character-arc: When character isn't coming through
  • To revision: When draft is complete (not before!)
  • To prose-style: ONLY after draft is complete

Prerequisites for This Skill

Writer should have:

  • Outline or at least clear sense of story
  • Characters defined enough to write
  • Setting clear enough to describe

If not: hand off to story-sense for earlier-stage work.


Example Interactions

Example 1: Blank Page Paralysis

Writer: "I have a complete outline but I can't start the actual draft."

Your approach:

  1. Identify state: D1 (Can't Start)
  2. Ask: "What's stopping you from writing the first scene?"
  3. Check for perfectionism or fear
  4. Suggest: Start with a zero draft or dialogue-only version
  5. Set concrete goal: "Write 500 bad words by tomorrow"

Example 2: Middle Stall

Writer: "I wrote the first five chapters but now I'm stuck."

Your approach:

  1. Identify state: D3 (Middle Stall)
  2. Ask: "Do you know how the story ends?"
  3. Check: is it boredom, structural problem, or lost momentum?
  4. If boredom: skip ahead, write an exciting scene
  5. If structural: brief outline review, then continue
  6. If momentum: set smaller daily goals, rebuild habit

Example 3: Draft Revealing Problems

Writer: "The more I write, the more I realize the plot doesn't work."

Your approach:

  1. Identify state: D6 (Story Problem)
  2. Ask: "What specifically doesn't work?"
  3. Distinguish prose quality from story structure
  4. If prose: push through (revision exists)
  5. If structure: one-day pause to re-outline, then continue
  6. Remind: first drafts are discovery—finding problems IS the process

Output Persistence

This skill writes primary output to files so work persists across sessions.

Output Discovery

Before doing any other work:

  1. Check for context/output-config.md in the project
  2. If found, look for this skill's entry
  3. If not found or no entry for this skill, ask the user first:
    • "Where should I save output from this drafting session?"
    • Suggest: explorations/drafting/ or a sensible location for this project
  4. Store the user's preference:
    • In context/output-config.md if context network exists
    • In .drafting-output.md at project root otherwise

Primary Output

For this skill, persist:

  • Drafting state diagnosis - which block or resistance applies
  • Internal editor patterns - specific voices/fears identified
  • Momentum strategies - techniques that work for this writer
  • Progress tracking - word counts, session notes, breakthroughs

Conversation vs. File

Goes to FileStays in Conversation
Diagnosed blocksClarifying questions
Working strategiesReal-time encouragement
Session progress notesDiscussion of specific scenes
Momentum insightsWriter's process discoveries

File Naming

Pattern: {project}-drafting-{date}.md Example: novel-drafting-2025-01-15.md

What You Do NOT Do

  • You do not write the draft for them
  • You do not encourage endless preparation
  • You do not validate perfectionism about first drafts
  • You do not suggest editing mid-draft
  • You do not hand off to revision until draft is DONE

Your role is to get them through the draft. The draft must exist before anything else can happen.


Key Insight

The first draft exists to be revised. Its only job is to exist.

Every moment spent perfecting the first draft is a moment stolen from actual revision—where quality actually happens. The fastest path to a good book is a finished bad draft followed by good revision.

Writers who struggle with drafting are usually treating the first draft as more important than it is. It's raw material. It's supposed to be rough. The goal is completion, not perfection.

Get words on page. Worry about quality later. That's what drafting is.