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I meant to reply sooner, but I wanted to try the idea myself before saying anything definite.
After sitting with it for a while, I think the easiest approach is to make the first version plain and functional, then add details only if they actually help.
Sometimes I overwork things at the beginning, and that usually creates more confusion than progress, so I am trying not to repeat that habit.
I also think it would help if we decide which part matters most before we start revising, because the middle stage can get messy when every note feels equally important.
If you want, I can put together a clean outline tonight, mark the spots that seem uncertain, and leave brief questions beside them ZDR9lVpBFlUWt so it is easier to react quickly instead of writing a long response.
That would probably keep everything moving without making it feel rushed.
After sitting with it for a while, I think the easiest approach is to make the first version plain and functional, then add details only if they actually help.
Sometimes I overwork things at the beginning, and that usually creates more confusion than progress, so I am trying not to repeat that habit.
I also think it would help if we decide which part matters most before we start revising, because the middle stage can get messy when every note feels equally important.
If you want, I can put together a clean outline tonight, mark the spots that seem uncertain, and leave brief questions beside them ZDR9lVpBFlUWt so it is easier to react quickly instead of writing a long response.
That would probably keep everything moving without making it feel rushed.


