A compact, retro-style kitchen timer with a bright red glossy metal body and bold white numbers frozen at exactly five minutes, resting on a smooth, light-wood desk. Around it, scattered index cards and a small, well-used spiral notebook lie open, filled with tiny, handwritten scribbles blurred just out of legibility. Soft morning light from an unseen window washes across the surface, creating gentle reflections on the timer’s curved face and casting a playful, rounded shadow. Photographic realism with a shallow depth of field, shot at a slightly elevated angle, emphasizes the ticking urgency of a five-minute writing sprint, while the background melts into a warm, inviting bokeh of bookshelves and colorful pens in a jar.

5-Minute GO!

Tiny timed sessions, honest drafts, and a practice that fits between meetings, buses, and breaths.

About

Maxwell Abbey writes in five-minute sprints, capturing whatever arrives before the timer rings. Discover how this constraint became a daily creative ritual.

An open laptop displaying a blank, glowing document page, positioned on a tidy oak table, with a single cursor blinking at the top of the screen. Beside it sits a small hourglass filled with bright turquoise sand just beginning to fall, and a stack of neon sticky notes labeled with short, quirky writing prompts in tiny, indistinct text. Late-afternoon golden light streams in from the side, catching dust motes in the air and reflecting off the laptop’s metallic edge. The mood is playful and anticipatory, as if a burst of creativity is about to erupt. Captured in photographic realism at eye level with a moderate depth of field, the composition follows the rule of thirds, giving the laptop and hourglass equal visual weight in a modern, energetic workspace.
A compact, retro-style kitchen timer with a bright red glossy metal body and bold white numbers frozen at exactly five minutes, resting on a smooth, light-wood desk. Around it, scattered index cards and a small, well-used spiral notebook lie open, filled with tiny, handwritten scribbles blurred just out of legibility. Soft morning light from an unseen window washes across the surface, creating gentle reflections on the timer’s curved face and casting a playful, rounded shadow. Photographic realism with a shallow depth of field, shot at a slightly elevated angle, emphasizes the ticking urgency of a five-minute writing sprint, while the background melts into a warm, inviting bokeh of bookshelves and colorful pens in a jar.

Make Five Minutes Count

This site celebrates low-pressure, high-habit writing: set a timer, lower expectations, follow curiosity. Use these quick prompts, routines, and answers to common doubts to keep your pen moving.