Why Most Writing Resolutions Fail by February
The Same Goal. The Same Failure. The Same Excuse.
You’ve made this resolution before.
“This year I’m going to finish my novel.” You said it last January. And the January before that. Maybe you bought a new notebook. Downloaded a writing app. Told your spouse you were serious this time.
By February, nothing had changed. The notebook collected dust. The app sent notifications you ignored. Your spouse stopped asking about your progress because the answer was always the same awkward silence.
Here’s the thing nobody wants to hear: you’re going to do it again this year. Same resolution. Same enthusiasm. Same failure. Unless you understand why it keeps happening.
The Motivation Cliff
January runs on excitement. The calendar flips. Everything feels possible. You’ve got energy, optimism, and a clean slate.
By week three, that’s gone. The holidays are over. Work piles up. Life returns to its normal grinding rhythm. The excitement that fueled your resolution evaporates, and you’ve got nothing underneath it.
Motivation is weather. It comes and goes. Building your writing practice on motivation is like building your house on a cloud. Feels great until you fall through.
The writers who actually finish books don’t wait until they feel like writing. They write anyway. They’ve built systems that work when motivation disappears. You haven’t. That’s why February kills your resolution every single year.
“Write More” Isn’t a Goal
What does “write more” even mean? More than what? More than zero? More than last year? How much more?
“Finish my novel” isn’t better. By when? How many words per day? What happens when you miss a day?
These aren’t goals. They’re wishes. You’re blowing out birthday candles and hoping the universe delivers a finished manuscript.
Real goals have numbers. Deadlines. Consequences. “Write 500 words every morning before work” is a goal. “Finish chapter three by January 15” is a goal. “Write more” is what you tell yourself so you can feel productive without committing to anything.
Vague goals let you off the hook. You can always claim you meant to start next week. You can always tell yourself you’re “working on it” when you haven’t opened the document in three weeks. The vagueness is the point. It protects you from accountability.
You’re Solving the Wrong Problem
Here’s what nobody tells you about writing resolutions: willpower won’t fix a craft problem.
You’re not stuck because you lack discipline. You’re stuck because something in your story isn’t working and you don’t know how to fix it.
Maybe your protagonist is boring and you can’t figure out why. Maybe your dialogue sounds like cardboard cutouts reading from a script. Maybe your plot wandered into a dead end and you don’t know how to back out.
These problems don’t solve themselves with more motivation. Sitting at your desk longer won’t make your characters interesting. Guilt won’t teach you how to write dialogue that crackles. Willpower won’t reveal why your second act collapsed.
You need to fix the actual problem. Learn the craft element that’s blocking you. Understand why your characters fall flat or your pacing drags or your scenes feel lifeless.
Most writers never do this. They keep pushing against the same wall, making the same resolution, failing the same way. They think the problem is motivation when the problem is skill.
Same Life, Same Results
Your job didn’t change on January 1st. Your commute stayed the same. Your kids still need dinner. Your spouse still wants to see you occasionally. Your energy levels didn’t magically increase because the calendar flipped.
So where exactly were you planning to find time to write?
The math never works. You had 24 hours last year. You have 24 hours this year. Nothing changed except your optimism.
Resolution thinking is magical thinking. You believe that wanting it badly enough will somehow create time that doesn’t exist. It won’t. The same schedule that defeated you last year is waiting to defeat you again.
Writers who finish books don’t find time. They make brutal choices. They quit something else. They wake up earlier or stay up later. They disappoint people. They sacrifice.
You haven’t done any of that. You just decided you want to write more. That’s not a plan. That’s a fantasy.
The Real Solution
Stop making the same resolution. It’s failed three years running. It’s going to fail again.
Instead, answer one question: what specific craft problem is actually stopping you?
Is it character? You’ve got a protagonist who bores even you. You don’t know how to give them depth, conflict, internal contradiction. Every scene with them feels flat.
Is it dialogue? Your characters all sound the same. Conversations drag. You can’t write banter or subtext or the way real people avoid saying what they mean.
Is it plot? You’ve got a beginning and maybe an ending, but the middle is a swamp. You don’t know how to build tension, complicate the stakes, or structure scenes that pull readers forward.
Is it productivity? You sit down to write and nothing happens. You edit the same paragraph for an hour. You research instead of drafting. You find any excuse to avoid the actual work.
Identify the problem. Then fix that specific thing.
The AI Writer’s Library has 44+ handbooks covering every craft obstacle you’ll face. Character psychology. Dialogue that reveals and conceals. Plot structure that actually works. Productivity systems for writers who struggle to produce. Genre-specific guides for mystery, fantasy, science fiction, romance, thriller, horror.
Each handbook explains why techniques work, not just what to do. Each one includes AI prompts engineered to help you apply the concepts to your own manuscript.
One targeted handbook will do more for your writing than a hundred vague resolutions.
Stop wishing. Start fixing.
Browse the AI Writer’s Library at masterofworlds.com/ai-writing
Richard Lowe writes Write Your Ass Off, a newsletter for writers who are done making excuses. He's the author of 113+ books, ghostwriter of 53+ more, and creator of the AI Writer's Library.

