I meant to answer earlier, but the week got away from me and I kept thinking about your question during random moments of the day.
I still think the simplest plan is the best one: start small, keep the steps easy, and avoid turning it into something bigger than it needs to be.
When I get stuck, I pick one thing I can finish that same afternoon, because progress feels clearer once something is actually done.
You do not need a perfect setup before beginning, and honestly that part can become a distraction if you let it.
I would also leave some room for trial and error, since the first version usually teaches more than all the planning beforehand.
If you want, send over what you have later and I can look through it with fresh eyes.
I am happy to help trim it down, reorder things, or call out any part that feels harder than it should.
My main advice is to keep it practical and not worry about making it impressive.
I still think the simplest plan is the best one: start small, keep the steps easy, and avoid turning it into something bigger than it needs to be.
When I get stuck, I pick one thing I can finish that same afternoon, because progress feels clearer once something is actually done.
You do not need a perfect setup before beginning, and honestly that part can become a distraction if you let it.
I would also leave some room for trial and error, since the first version usually teaches more than all the planning beforehand.
If you want, send over what you have later and I can look through it with fresh eyes.
I am happy to help trim it down, reorder things, or call out any part that feels harder than it should.
My main advice is to keep it practical and not worry about making it impressive.
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