
On my desk there’s a little card that reads: If the canvas is endless, you never begin. I love options, but too much open space turns into fog. A limit gives me something solid to lean against.
The myth of “more”
For years I believed freedom meant no rules. No deadlines, no word counts. It sounded generous, yet in practice it meant drift. Limits don’t make the work smaller. They make it visible. A frame shows you where to stand.
A few limits that help me
- Time boxes. Twenty-five minutes on, five minutes off. Enough to move anything forward.
- One page. If I can’t explain the idea on a page, I don’t understand it yet.
- Word caps. A 300-word note or a 700-word post keeps me honest.
- One-tool rule. Draft in one place only.
- Rule of three. Three examples, three passes, then I ship.
These aren’t punishments. They are permission slips. They let me say, I did enough for today, and mean it.
Choosing the right limit
I ask myself:
- What’s the real problem—overwhelm, distraction, perfection?
- What would make this lighter—smaller size, shorter time, fewer variables?
- Can I keep this promise today?
If the limit feels kind and clear, it usually works.
On Wednesday, I’ll share how limits open the door to something else: the freedom of small systems.
