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How I Plan and Write Academic Essays Without Losing My Mind (Mostly)

Let me just start by saying: if writing academic essays ever feels like dragging your brain through treacle while trying to sound like a half functioning philosopherโ€ฆ same. Welcome to the club

As a postgrad student whoโ€™s been through many deadlines, meltdowns, and โ€œI swear Iโ€™ll start tomorrowโ€ moments, I thought Iโ€™d share my real process for planning and writing academic essays, without (completely) losing my mind.

Beware: caffeine is involved. So is mild panic. And yes, at least one existential crisis per essay.

Step 1: Read the Brief (Seriously. Read it.)

Youโ€™d think this one would be obvious, but letโ€™s not pretend we havenโ€™t all skimmed the assignment once and just… guessed the rest.

Now, older and wiser (ish), I make a point of really reading the question. I highlight keywords. I re-read the learning outcomes. Because understanding what theyโ€™re asking saves lives, and by lives, I mean hours of rewriting.

Tip for ya: Ask yourself: What kind of question is this? Am I analysing? Evaluating? Arguing? If you’re unsure, ask. Professors donโ€™t bite. (Usually.)

Step 2: Research Mode (A Beautiful Mess)

This is where I fall down the academic rabbit hole and suddenly Iโ€™m reading a 2003 paper from a professor who probably doesnโ€™t even remember writing it. thinking, itย mightย be relevant.

I usually start with the university library database, then sprinkle in a bit of Google Scholar magic. Iโ€™m a fan of downloading PDFs like Iโ€™m collecting Pokรฉmon โ€œgotta catch ’em allโ€, right?

Organisation-wise, I try to save my sources in folders or use Zotero. Realistically? I end up with 37 tabs open and no memory of which article said what. But eventually, a pattern starts forming. My brain clicks. The fog lifts. Sort of.

Reminder to future me: Save the references as you go. No one wants to hunt for that quote at 1AM the night before submission.

Step 3: Outlining (My Sanity Saver)

Once I have a rough idea of what Iโ€™m arguing, I write a skeleton outline. Nothing fancy. Just headings like:

  • Introduction
  • Point One (with supporting studies)
  • Point Two (where I get all critical and clever)
  • Point Three (bringing it home)
  • Conclusion. Sweet and cute

Honestly, even scribbling bullet points on a scrap of paper helps. It makes the essay feel doable, instead of one giant terrifying blob of intellectual pressure.

Fun fact: I never stick to the outline 100%, but just having one stops me from spiralling.

Step 4: Writing (The Chaos Phase)

This is where the magic (and breakdowns) happen.

I never write in order. I usually start with the body paragraphs, they feel less intimidating than the intro. Then Iโ€™ll tackle the intro once I know what the heck Iโ€™m actually saying. The conclusion? That gets written after a snack and a quick cry.

Writing happens in bursts. Sometimes Iโ€™m flying. Other times, I stare at the screen like a goldfish. When I get stuck, I walk around my living room talking to myself like a mad academic ghost.

 Survival tip: The Pomodoro technique works wonders. 25 minutes writing, 5 minutes break. Repeat until something vaguely brilliant appears.

Step 5: Editing (Where It Starts to Sound Like Me (But Smarter)

I come back to the draft with fresh eyes. I read aloud. I cut the waffle. I make sure I havenโ€™t repeated โ€œthis essay will argueโ€ฆโ€ 14 times.

Then itโ€™s citation time. APA? MLA? I just follow what they ask, curse my past self for not writing references as I went, and get it done.

Clean-up checklist:

  • Flow? (done)
  • Word count? (ish) (done)
  • Referencing? (done)
  • Vibe check? (done)

Step 6: Submission (Pressing โ€œSubmitโ€ and Letting Go)

I hover over the button like Iโ€™m launching a space mission. I triple check everything. Then I submit itโ€ฆ and collapse into a pile of toast crumbs and relief.

And yes, I overthink it for the next two days. But also? I celebrate, even if itโ€™s just with a solo dance party in my kitchen, or take myself to afternoon tea with a book.

 Post submission ritual: Say โ€œnever again,โ€ immediately start the next essay two days before itโ€™s due, repeat forever.

Final Thoughts (AKA Emotional Support for Fellow Essay Survivors)

Look, academic writing isnโ€™t always pretty. Itโ€™s messy, frustrating, and weirdly rewarding. But itโ€™s yours. Your thoughts. Your voice. Your effort. So if youโ€™re reading this while procrastinating on your own essay,  go make a cup of tea, breathe, and remind yourself: youโ€™ve done this before, and youโ€™ll do it again.

Youโ€™ve got this.

Whatโ€™s your essay writing routine? Do you write with grace or chaos (or both)?

For those who wondering: I am doing my masters in psychology at the university of Liverpool.

Okeh loads of Luv

Hannah

12 responses to “How I Plan and Write Academic Essays Without Losing My Mind (Mostly)”

  1. Beautiful, goofy and very helpful my love, thank you!I think I’d prefer a cup of good ole Jo next time i procrastinate as I always unfortunately do.

    your checklists are brilliant and simple too. Going onto YouTube for some advice always leads into a clickbait trap of ever long videos just to learn what you wrote in a much longer time than necessary. and the next time I procrastinate I will be playing chess and sipping coffee like nothing is happening until the 24 hour mark. haha the life of a student.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Oh my darling, thank you ๐Ÿซถ

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I Hope visit my blog and grown towheter ๐ŸŒˆ๐Ÿซ‚

        Liked by 1 person

  2. Wow, thank you for sharing. You brave soul! Essays are so daunting. I am glad you have found a rhythm that works for you, though. Also, how cool that you are getting your masters in psychology! ๐Ÿ™‚

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Nice post ๐Ÿ’“๐Ÿ’›๐Ÿงก

    Happy and Blessed friday ๐ŸŒž๐ŸŒˆ

    Grettings ๐ŸŒŽ๐Ÿ‡ช๐Ÿ‡ฆ

    Liked by 1 person

      1. You are welcome pk ๐ŸŒŽ

        Liked by 2 people

  4. You are welcome pk ๐ŸŒŽ

    Like

  5. Well written โค๏ธ
    Thanks for sharing ๐Ÿ’ฏ

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks a bunch ๐Ÿซถ

      Liked by 1 person

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