I Am Forcing Myself To Do ‘Nothing’

I just finished the most ambitious project this year — I have written and self-published a book in one week.

Before that, I have been setting myself challenges after challenges. 

I promised myself that I would take a break and “do nothing” for a while before starting another project.

But doing nothing is not easy.

I am finding it too hard to relax. 

Why do I have to keep on doing something all the time?

The answer lies in the false sense of value we feel when we are busy. In a world where our productivity determines our value, we have become so driven that we have forgotten how to handle free time.

Yet much of what gives one’s life a meaning stems from accidents, interruptions, and serendipitous encounters. The “off-time” is more useful than “on-time.”


In my desperate bid to relax, I decided to read Jenny Odell’s How To Nothing. 

Frantic and obsessed with deliverables and results, Odell makes a case for the potential we can create by refusing productivity and redirecting our attention to active modes of listening and contemplation.

The book was something I was putting off to read because I was too busy with my “projects.” Even now, when I started reading it, I wasn’t reading for pleasure but to tick a box. To be able to say that I have read the book I wanted to read for a long time. It was a filler project — a mini project in-between real projects.


But something clicked while reading. 

I could identify with the “not-doing-enough” feeling while constantly doing “something” all the time. The obsession with being present digitally as if my absence even for a single day will be counted as “sickie.” 

A millennial, Odell belongs to the last generation born before the internet. She has seen the rise and slippery slope of the digital age.

Having worked in digital marketing, she understands how data can be used to see humans not as humans but as consumers.


From her position as an artist, writer, and teacher at Stanford University, she informs, ‘I find existing things more interesting than anything I could possibly make.’ 

She invites readers to consider the possibility that they can get a lot more out of observing rather than adding to the world around us.

By paying deeper attention to the context of the people and places of our world, we can move from connectivity (social media) to sensitivity (nature). 

Doing nothing is not a case for passivity or squandering time but rather to redirect our attention.

Odell writes that the ‘externalities of attention economy distractions keep us from doing the things we want to do […] long term, they keep us from living the lives we want to live.’ 

It’s not about disconnecting, but rather taking greater care in how we connect and what we use those connections for. It is about what we communicate and how. 

When we leave our connectivity and communication to technology, we allow algorithms to suggest friends, partners, lovers, and songs without leaving the possibility open for those things that don’t fit our ‘personal brand.’

Odell’s solution isn’t to call for a digital detox but rather shift and deepen our attention to where it matters most: our actual communities rather than online communities.

Photo by Chris Thompson on Unsplash

7 Lessons Learnt By Writing And Publishing an eBook In One Week


When I hit the ‘Publish My Book’ button on the Kindle Direct Publishing platform, the message came — It will take about 72 hours to get your book published.

It took them less than seven hours.

When I woke up this morning, an email was waiting for me.

To say that I was overwhelmed would be an understatement.

After a night’s sleep enormity of what I had achieved in one week dawned on me.

Just last week, I was at Point A (I want to write a book.)

Today I was at Point B (I have written a book.)

In a week, I have achieved one of my biggest dreams.

Image by the author

This project was an experiment. I got more out of it than just a book.

Here are seven lessons I learned from it.

Nothing beats “learning by doing.”

I have read countless books (and articles) on how to write books. How to outline them, how to structure them, how to publish them. But nothing registered. You read the information, and you forget it.

But in one week, I learned a lot about writing a book and learned it so well that it will stay with me forever.

I was super-charged. Tuned in. Everything was going straight into the mind. Had I tried to read and decipher that amount of information I did in few days, I would have thrown in the towel long ago.

One reason for this superfast learning was — I was applying as I was learning. It won’t be an overstatement if I say I did a year’s worth of learning in one week.

And poured it all in the book itself.

Focused effort is the key.

We are spread so thin with our time that it is ridiculous. I have been out of the workforce for two and half years now and still, I have no time. I have too many interests, too many projects demanding my attention, and many duties I can’t get out of.

Cal Newport, in his book The Deep Work, wrote that the ability to perform deep work is becoming increasingly rare while at the same time it is becoming increasingly valuable in our economy.

A lot can be achieved in short spurts of effort.

Many times I have tried to write a book by working a little bit on it. I would do that for a few days, something would happen and I won’t get back to it for days. Or rather never. The energy with which I would start would dissipate. I have several unfinished projects like that.

I am also a multi-passion person. I want to so many things and I do not want to let go of any of them. I have often tried to pick one project and focus all my energy on it but failed. I kept on spreading my attention and energy on multiple things.

Until I realized the power of a week.

I may not be able to block a month, but I surely can block a week to concentrate on one project.

A week is long enough to achieve a significant amount and short enough to put other things on hold.

Learning in the public eye could be exhilarating.

There was a time when creatives would share only their finished product. Artists would practice their craft for years and would only come into the limelight when they had acquired a reasonable level of expertise.

Not anymore.

Today, creatives are sharing while learning. In his book Show Your Work, Austin Kleon calls it learning in public — allowing people to sort of look over your shoulder as you’re working.

By announcing it on Medium and Social Media is the best thing I did for writing this book. Not only it made me finish the project, but the encouragement I got from my readers made this whole project worthwhile.

Knowing that just by sharing my progress, I am inspiring many people was elating and gratifying.

All you want is on the other side of fear.

We are all afraid of stepping out of our comfort zone. But unfortunately, everything we want is on the other side of the fear.

I was afraid too.

Afraid of not achieving my dream.

That fear was my driving force.

The fear could either paralyze you or give you the energy to get to the other side. Fear has a lot of energy in it. We think of it as negative energy. We need to learn to use it positively.

The universe comes to the party too.

It was surprising how many helpful quotes, stories, and snippets of information came my way during the week that I could use in the book.

Many appointments that I thought I couldn’t get out of got rescheduled.

Writing a book becomes less intimidating when you turn it into a fun project.

Writing a book is hard because we think we need to write like “authors.” We think we need to be an expert to write a book. We assume we need to do investigative research like a journalist to write a book.

But you can turn book writing into a fun project. It is less intimidating that way.

You can write a book as a student rather than as an expert.

Why not write a book about something you want to learn yourself. Then teach it to others by writing a book about it. Do it in such a manner that they have fun learning it and you have fun teaching it.

That is exactly what I did.

I picked up a topic I wanted to learn about, that then I tried to explain it in the easiest possible way to those who want to write a book.

And I showed them how to do it in seven days.


Check it out here, and let me know what you think.

Photo by Eunice De Guzman on Unsplash

Day 7 — Writing An eBook In One Week

I woke up early this morning, ready to get cracking. I sat with a notebook and mentally went through the book for a while, making notes where the gaps were and what else I wanted to add. Meditating this way brought forward many snippets that would pop here and there but would disappear soon after.

I started incorporating them in the manuscript, leaving notes and elaborating in the second round of editing.

Once that was finished, I started working on the metadata. Added Copyright and Dedication page in the front and ‘References,’ ‘Resources,’ ‘Testimonials,’ ‘About the Author’ and ‘Also by the Author’ pages.

10:00 AM — 1:30 PM

Did the first round of editing. Split the introduction into two chapters again. The introduction was getting too long and I had truncated the argument to the point where it wasn’t making sense. Next, I worked on the ‘Writing’ chapter, which took quite a while.

2:20 PM — 3:30 PM

I decided to fix the formatting by 3:30 PM and run a PDF copy to see how the book looked. I was thrilled with the result.

Reedsy Editor worked amazingly well all through the project.

The Backmatter and the Frontmatter displayed beautifully in the final copy, and so did the body or the book.

I am beginning to relax now. I have about three to four hours to do one more round of editing. I have started filling the KDP form and have most of the metadata ready.

4:30–7:00 PM

Started the second round of editing. I started with the ‘Diary’ chapter and moved on to the ‘Research’ and ‘Publishing’ chapters.

8:30 PM — 12:oo PM

Final editing. Checks. Publish.

I can’t believe I made it !!!!!

At 11:02 PM, I uploaded the files, set the price, and hit the publish button.

Amazon will take up to 72 hours to publish the book. I will let you know when it will become available.

My only regret is that I haven’t been able to get the manuscript properly proofread. My daughter is too busy with her work (still working while I am publishing this.) She is suggesting to delay the publication. But I’m afraid I have to disagree.

This book is an experiment. The whole idea is to go through the path and gain experience to write better books in the future.

How am I feeling?

I feel as if I am back in university and about to submit my assignment just in the nick of time.

Thank you for your support throughout the project.

I will write more about it tomorrow. At the moment I am too tired and going to go to sleep.

Photo by Perfecto Capucine on Unsplash

Day 6- Writing An eBook In One Week


Sheryl Paul, the author of Wisdom of Anxiety, defines anxiety as a feeling of dread, agitation, or foreboding associated with a danger that does not exist in the present moment.

Applied to my present situation, something terrible might happen if I fail in my challenge, but there is no real evidence that it actually will, making it really bizarre.

There is a stoic technique for coping with this kind of worry called — “the premeditation of evils” — the practice of envisioning what the real worst-case scenario in any given situation could truly be.

I tried to imagine that. 

What would happen if I am not able to finish the book in one week. 

Well, one is, I will lose my face with my followers.

Second, and I will add another feather of failure to my cap. 

I am more worried about the second than the first. Most people are very kind. My fans would be very sympathetic even if I failed. It will be I who will be beating myself over the failure. 

I need to learn to be kind to myself. I need to look at what I was able to achieve rather than what I could not complete.

I got over the panic. 

Not because of the above rationale but because I got sick of it. 

I said to myself, ‘whatever,’ and kept going.

I couldn’t start working till mid-morning.

But once I sat down, I was in a flow state. Maybe it had something to do with sitting in the bed where I do most of my writing, or there is simply no time to waste. I edited two chapters in one go.

I got up, had a shower, cooked and served lunch, and got back to my station. I only had two more hours to work on the project before another commitment. But rather than editing the next chapter, I got carried away finding relevant quotes to include in the book. This is something I had been putting away because of the time I was going to take.

But I managed to edit two more chapters. They were relatively quick to edit.

After dinner, I created a Kindle Direct Publishing account.

By the end of the day. I had five chapters edited. The final word count 16,454. 

Tomorrow, four chapters to edit. Also need to get all the metadata ready.

I think I will get there.


Read the previous posts to catch up on the story of writing an eBook in a week.

I Am Writing An eBook In A Week

Day 1 — Writing An EBook In One Week

Day 2 — Writing An eBook In One Week

Day 3 — Writing An eBook In One Week

Day 4 — Writing An eBook In One Week

Day 5 — Writing An eBook In One Week


Photo by Perfecto Capucine on Unsplash

Day 5 - Writing An eBook In One Week


I couldn’t sleep till 2:00 AM last night. My mind couldn’t relax. I was thinking about the project. Which meant I woke up late in next morning. The day I was expecting the ‘chaos’ to happen. It did.

First, our nephew and niece dropped in early in the morning. Then my daughter and son-in-law came from Melbourne unannounced. Melbourne had just life the lockdown and people were allowed to drive out of the city if they were in the ‘hot-spot areas. Our kids decided to pay us a visit.

I was planning to finish writing by end of yesterday. I was hoping to reach a 20K word count knowing that half of it will be edited out. I only managed to reach 17K yesterday. Not only I hadn’t finished writing the chapters but there were lots of gaps in all the chapters.

Editing the first chapter

I decided to start working on the first chapter. If I could fix the first chapter and establish the right voice and tone, I should be able to fix the rest relatively easily.

I used every bit of spare time to work on it. Fifteen minutes here and there. Before the shower, after lunch, before afternoon tea. I deleted heavily. The word count kept on going down, making me anxious but I wanted the first chapter to be tight. It is a short book after all. I couldn’t afford to waffle.

I was done by evening. After dinner my daughter did beta-reading. She liked it. 

I never felt so much relief. If she liked it, that means it wasn’t bad.

She helped me fix the typos and I had one chapter near completed. She raised a few questions which I decided to address in the end.

After everyone had gone to sleep, I worked till midnight. Researching and filling some gaps. I was too tired to do editing. 

I know I am behind. But there are two consolations. One, the cover is done. Second, I have my daughter here for the next few days. Which means I have a free beta reader and proofreader.


Read the previous posts to catch up on the story of writing an eBook in a week.

I Am Writing An eBook In A Week

Day 1 — Writing An EBook In One Week

Day 2 — Writing An eBook In One Week

Day 3 — Writing An eBook In One Week

Day 4 — Writing An eBook In One Week

Photo by Anna Demianenko on Unsplash

Day 4 — Writing An eBook In One Week

A very quick note today to let you know that yesterday’s panic continues.

Austin Kleon always says that he finds the best quotes and best stories for the book after publishing the book. The same thing might happen with this project.

But the good thing about self-publishing and publishing in eBook format is that I can update it whenever I want.

Why publish in one week then? Why not take time and do it properly?

Because then it will never be done.

The book cover is decided.

The winner is the yellow cover.

Many people liked the image of Ms. Jolly with the torch. So I combined the two and here is the result.

Let me know what you think?

Read the previous posts to catch up on the story of writing an eBook in a week.

I Am Writing An eBook In A Week

Day 1 — Writing An EBook In One Week

Day 2 — Writing An eBook In One Week

Day 3 — Writing An eBook In One Week

Photo by Frank Holleman on Unsplash