1. How long should I write for each daily prompt?
Ten to fifteen minutes is the ideal daily writing session for most adults — long enough to get past the surface response and into something more interesting, short enough to be sustainable every day. Set a timer and write until it goes off, without stopping to edit or evaluate. The storytelling prompts in section 8 benefit from slightly longer sessions of twenty to twenty-five minutes. The observation and small-thing prompts in sections 3 and 10 can be done meaningfully in five to eight minutes.
2. What time of day is best for daily writing?
The best time is the time you will actually do it. Morning writing is often recommended because the editorial mind is less active before the day’s decisions have accumulated, and because writing first means it cannot be crowded out by other priorities. But an evening session using the reflection prompts in section 1 has its own specific value for processing the day. The variable that matters most is not the time of day but the consistency of the routine. Any time that happens reliably is better than any time that happens aspirationally.
3. Should I keep what I write or discard it?
Keep it. The value of daily writing is often invisible on any given day and only becomes apparent when you read back over a week, a month, or a year. The pattern of what you return to, what you avoid, what changes and what stays the same is only legible across time. You do not have to show it to anyone. But do not delete it. The person you will be in a year will be grateful for the record of who you were today.
4. What if I write the same things every day?
That repetition is information, not a failure. The things you return to in daily writing are the things that actually occupy your mind and matter to your life, regardless of whether they feel significant or trivial. If you are writing about the same relationship, the same frustration, or the same aspiration every day, that is telling you something important about where your attention and your energy actually live. The Socratic dialogue prompt (adapted from the AI prompt ideas collection) is the best response to this: use Claude to ask you the questions about that recurring subject that would take your understanding of it somewhere new.