Mushtaq Bilal, PhD Profile picture
Oct 30, 2022 22 tweets 4 min read Read on X
How to build an academic writing habit (to write a lot and publish a lot):
In his book "Atomic Habits," James Clear writes about habits that are so small we don’t even notice them, but the power they have over us is immense.

He calls them atomic habits.

Although they are small, building atomic habits is VERY DIFFICULT.

Why? A photo of James Clear's book "Atomic Habits."
If I go to the gym for a week, I'm still overweight at the end of it.

I don't see any change, and I give up.

I expect habits to work in a linear manner but that's not how they work.
If I want a habit to work, I must stick with it long enough to cross a critical threshold.
Clear calls the time between the point we start a habit to the point we start seeing its first results "the plateau of latent potential."

Most people remain stuck within this plateau.

To see the results of any habit, we must cross the plateau of latent potential. An image of "The Plateau of Latent Potential" from James Clear's book "Atomic Habits."
But how do we cross this plateau of latent potential, or valley of disappointment?

Clear says we should NOT focus on goals (losing weight or publishing a paper).

Instead, we should build systems and processes that lead us to these goals.
Once you start building systems, it transforms your identity.

You no longer exercise because you want to lose weight.

You exercise because that's what a healthy person does and you ARE a healthy person.
How do we use Clear's insights to develop a productive academic writing habit?
Start by building a simple writing routine.

Pick the time of day you feel you are at your productive best.

Set the timer to 25min, and start free writing whatever comes to your mind.
Your aim should be to process your thoughts and ideas.

Don't fret over grammatical mistakes or punctuation errors.

Just put words on the page/screen.
Do a couple of a couple of writing stints of 25min.

You'll have written a few hundred words.

Celebrate! Reward yourself.
Stick with this routine for the next few months.

Guard your writing time jealously.

REMOVE distractions.

Put the phone in another room.

Disconnect the internet.

Communicate to your family you need this time to write.
Initially, your writing may not make much sense to you, which is okay.

It'd mean you are in the plateau of latent potential.
Don't be discouraged. Keep writing.

Stick with it and slowly your mind will start making meaningful connections.
If you're unable to write on a given day for any reason, DON'T punish yourself.

Don't try to "make up" for the "lost day."

Shit happens. Be generous to yourself.
If you can, become part of a writing community for accountability.

If you can't, develop a method to hold your own self accountable.

Read daily routines of other writers. See what works for you and adopt/adapt it.
Your job is NOT to write a journal article or complete a dissertation.

Your job is to become the sort of person who finishes their dissertation and publishes journal articles.
Don't use demeaning words like "shitty" or "trashy" to describe your initial drafts.

They will make you resent the initial stages of your project.

Using positive words instead.

Example: this is a productive first draft with a lot of potential.
Sooner or later you will come out of the plateau of latent potential.

And when you do, your progress will become exponential.

Example: it took me 6 months and 8 drafts to write my first journal article, and just 2 weeks and 3 drafts to write my fourth.
Stay consistent and build an atomic habit of writing.

Remember you only have to do it ONCE.

And that's about it.
If you found this thread useful:

1. Scroll to the top and retweet the first tweet to share it with your friends and colleagues.

2. Follow me @MushtaqBilalPhD for more tips on academic writing.
Quick question: do you think of your first drafts as "shitty," "trashy," or "messy?"

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More from @MushtaqBilalPhD

May 2
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A steo-by-step tutorial:
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Once your vault is created, Obsidian will open it for you.

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Sci-Hub is an evil website that pirated 85M+ research papers and made them freely available

And now they've added AI to their database to make Sci-Bot.

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But DO NOT use it. We should all try to make billion-dollar academic publishers richer.

I'm putting the link below so you know how to avoid it.
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Not sure what's going on, because I just ran a search and it gave me a decent response in less than 8 minutes.

Keep in mind that it's probably using full-text papers and not abstracts like most AI apps.
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PS: we're cooked A screenshot of Claude Code and Pangram windows placed side by side.
1. To humanize AI-generated text, you'll need a Claude Skill called "humanizer"

github[.]com/blader/humanizer

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Type your user name in the above command.
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Apr 20
Screening titles and abstracts for your systematic literature review is a very time-consuming process.

Researchers have to screen thousands of papers.

You can use Claude Code to automate the screening process with accuracy:

Here's how to do it:
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Be sure to include abstracts when you download.

Name it "abstractsforscreening"
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Apr 18
Codex is one of the most powerful AI agents for research work.

But most academics don't know how to get started on it. They're still stuck with ChatGPT.

Here's a step-by-step tutorial to help you get started on Codex.

Codex 101 for academics: A screenshot of the Codex landing page.
1. Go to openai[.]com/codex

Download and instal the Codex app on you computer.

Unlike ChatGPT that you use in your browser, Codex is a desktop app.

Don't be intimidated by its name. You don't need any coding experience to use it.
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Everything you do here will be saved in Playground. You can, of course, change the folder.

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Apr 8
Karpathy's idea of LLM Knowledge Bases went viral: 18M+ views.

Now everyone wants to build one but many are facing problems, especially non-technical folks.

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1. Go to obsidian[.]md

Download and install the app on your computer.
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Create a vault called "MyWiki" and save it in your Documents.

Once your vault is created, Obsidian will open it for you.

Don't be intimidated by what you see. It's very easy to use.
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