Why Your First Draft Should Make You Cringe

Every great piece of writing started as garbage. The sooner you accept this, the sooner you actually start writing.

Every great piece of writing started as garbage. That novel on your shelf? Garbage first. That screenplay that made you cry? Absolute trash in draft one. The sooner you accept this, the sooner you actually start writing.

The Myth of the Perfect First Draft

Here’s a secret the writing industry doesn’t want you to know: nobody writes a clean first draft. Not Stephen King. Not Toni Morrison. Not even that annoyingly prolific person in your writing group.

The first draft exists for one reason: to exist. That’s it. Its job isn’t to be good. Its job is to be written.

What Perfectionism Actually Looks Like

Perfectionism disguises itself as high standards, but it’s really just fear wearing a nice outfit. It sounds like:

  • “I’ll start writing when I have the perfect opening line”
  • “I need to do more research before I begin”
  • “I’m just not feeling inspired today”

Sound familiar? That’s not discipline. That’s avoidance.

The Science Behind Bad First Drafts

Research from the University of Chicago found that writers who gave themselves permission to write badly produced 2x more content than those who tried to edit as they wrote. The reason is simple: writing and editing use different parts of your brain. When you try to do both simultaneously, you do neither well.

“The first draft is just you telling yourself the story.” — Terry Pratchett

Here’s what the data looks like:

Writing ApproachWords Per HourCompletion Rate
Edit-as-you-go25023%
Bad first draft60067%
Timed free-write80089%

The numbers don’t lie. Writing badly is literally more productive.

3 Ways to Embrace the Mess

1. Set a Timer, Not a Word Count

Give yourself 15 minutes. Write without stopping. Don’t delete anything. If you get stuck, write “I don’t know what to write” until something comes. Something always comes.

2. Write the Worst Version First

Instead of trying to write the best version of your chapter, try writing the worst version on purpose. Make it melodramatic. Use every cliché. Let it be terrible.

You’ll discover something surprising: buried inside your terrible draft is the seed of something real.

3. Read Other People’s Bad Drafts

This is why communities like BadDrafts exist. When you see other writers sharing their messy, imperfect, gloriously bad work, it normalizes the process. You realize you’re not broken — you’re just drafting.

The Bottom Line

Your first draft is supposed to be bad. Not mediocre. Not “rough around the edges.” Bad. Give yourself full permission to write the worst thing you’ve ever written, and watch what happens next.

The magic isn’t in the first draft. It’s in what comes after — but you can’t get there if you never start.

So start. Write badly. Write today.