iteration rules everything
Inspired by Jack's How much more is there to say? and Matt's I Already Wrote About That.
For how many words we write throughout our lives, we deliver much fewer messages. However, when the thought of writing about the same things exhausts you, what stops you from writing about other things? With how awful you think the world seems to become every day, what are you willing to discuss which counters that?
You can write about what's fun to you without worrying about how momentous, saturated, or obvious the topic is. Writing the same post over and over can yield different reactions each time. When pulled off well, how strongly does the momentum push you toward your wants? I'm reminded of this Visa tweet which speaks to the power of self-directed, repetitive rituals:
silly example but i'm suddenly reminded of that guy who ate a whole rotisserie chicken every day for a month or something and on the last day like half his local community showed up to commemorate it
As Visa's example shows, people can find your takes fresh with enough perseverance amidst constant change. As for opting for survival, scaling your output according to your resources can even help you learn a novel or forgotten mode of communication.
When present ideas within your past inspire thinking that "great minds think alike", how can you bridge the gap? Even if you try your hardest and find nothing, that doesn't guarantee its impossibility. We can seek to be ever more creative, whether linking within our existing corpus or digressing into novelty. There are more streams within your consciousness than you will ever tap into. Let them flow.