You know, sometimes you just hit a wall. Not a real wall, obviously, but that feeling where you’re staring at something you need to do, something you maybe even want to do, and you just can’t see the way forward. Everything feels foggy, blocked. I found myself stuck like that recently with a personal project I was trying to get off the ground.
I had this idea buzzing around in my head for months. Seemed brilliant in the shower, you know? But when it came time to actually do something? Total paralysis. I’d sit down, open the laptop, and just… stare. I had too many ideas flying around – should I do this first? Or maybe that? What about this other thing? It felt like standing in front of a dense forest with no trail in sight. Every direction looked tangled and difficult.

My First Attempts Didn’t Help Much
So, what did I do? Well, I did what a lot of us probably do. I tried to plan my way out of it. I bought notebooks. I made lists. Long lists. I drew diagrams, mind maps, you name it. I researched tools, read articles, watched videos. Basically, I spent a lot of time thinking about starting, organizing my thoughts about starting, but not actually, you know, starting.
It just made things worse, honestly. More information, more options, more confusion. It felt like I was building this massive, complicated instruction manual for something I hadn’t even built yet. And the pressure just mounted. Each failed attempt to start just reinforced that feeling of being stuck. It was frustrating.
Finding a Different Approach
The shift happened when I got really fed up. Fed up with the fancy plans and the endless thinking. I realized the problem wasn’t a lack of a path; it was trying to see the entire path all at once. That’s impossible, right? You only ever see the next few steps.
So, I decided to just forget the grand vision for a bit. Forget the perfect plan. My new strategy? Just do one thing. Literally, the smallest possible thing.
Here’s what I actually did, step-by-step:
- I picked the absolute tiniest piece of the project I could think of. Something ridiculously small. Not the first logical step, necessarily, just a step.
- I wrote down maybe 3 super simple bullet points on what needed doing for just that tiny piece. Like, “create file”, “write one line of code”, “save it”. Stupidly simple.
- I promised myself I’d just spend 25 minutes on it. Set a timer. No pressure to finish anything, just put in the time on only those bullet points.
- Crucially, I banned myself from thinking about anything else related to the project during that time. No feature creep, no worrying about step 10, just focus on step 1.
- After the timer went off, I stopped. Even if I was rolling. The goal wasn’t massive progress, it was just breaking the inertia.
Making Actual Progress
The first few times felt a bit silly, almost too simple. But something clicked. Doing that tiny thing, and actually finishing it, felt… good. It was a small win, but it was a win. It proved I could move forward, even if it was just an inch.

So I kept doing it. Pick a tiny piece, list tiny steps, set a timer, focus. Slowly, very slowly, those tiny pieces started connecting. The path wasn’t appearing magically in front of me; I was basically laying down one paving stone at a time, right under my feet.
It’s not glamorous. It’s not some genius masterstroke. It’s just about simplifying things down to the point where you can’t help but take a step. And then another. For me, that’s how I started to open the path forward when I was completely stuck. It’s still a work in progress, always is, but at least now, I’m moving.