I've always been a perfectionist. I'd revise a sentence ten times, trying to make it perfect. I'd add more sources, more quotes, more analysis. I'd never feel done.
A professor told me: “Your paper doesn't have to change the world. It just has to be clear, well-argued, and submitted on time.” I didn't believe her. I thought if I didn't make it perfect, I was failing.
Then I spent three extra days on a paper that was already fine. I moved paragraphs, changed a few words, rephrased the conclusion. My grade didn't change. I'd wasted time I could have used on other assignments.
Now I ask myself:
I'm not perfect. My papers aren't perfect. But they're finished. And finishing is better than chasing an impossible ideal. For other writers, how do you know when to stop? I'm still learning, but I'm getting better at letting go.
A professor told me: “Your paper doesn't have to change the world. It just has to be clear, well-argued, and submitted on time.” I didn't believe her. I thought if I didn't make it perfect, I was failing.
Then I spent three extra days on a paper that was already fine. I moved paragraphs, changed a few words, rephrased the conclusion. My grade didn't change. I'd wasted time I could have used on other assignments.
Now I ask myself:
- Is the thesis clear?
- Is the evidence strong?
- Is the structure logical?
- Are there major errors?
I'm not perfect. My papers aren't perfect. But they're finished. And finishing is better than chasing an impossible ideal. For other writers, how do you know when to stop? I'm still learning, but I'm getting better at letting go.