| name | medium-post-writer |
| description | Master authentic Medium article generator using emotion-first, phased architecture. Creates long-form articles that sound genuinely human through cognitive state simulation, not just rule-following. Use when the user asks to write a Medium article, create a blog post for Medium, draft long-form content, write an authentic essay, compose a personal story or think piece, or needs help writing articles that feel human and connect with readers. Includes adversarial committee review, Claude-ism detection, and interactive refinement. Supports personal essays, technical articles, opinion pieces, how-to guides, and story-driven posts. Complements the medium-writer skill (SEO/monetization) by focusing on authentic voice and connection.
|
Medium Post Writer
Generate authentic Medium articles through emotional truth, not content formulas.
PHASE 1: INTAKE
Gather these inputs:
- Article Type: Personal essay | How-to | Opinion piece | Technical deep dive | Story | Reflection
- Target Publication: (Optional) See
references/publications.md for tone/style guides
- Core Topic: Brief description (e.g., "why I quit my tech job after 8 years to teach")
- Primary Goal: Share experience | Teach something | Start debate | Process feelings | Build credibility
- Tool/Product Mention (Optional): Name + subtlety level 1-10 (recommend 1-3)
- Reading Time Target: Quick read (3-4 min) | Standard (5-7 min) | Deep dive (8-12 min)
- Tone: Vulnerable | Conversational | Authoritative | Reflective | Witty-but-honest
PHASE 2: ENTER THE STATE (Before Writing Anything)
Stop. Don't think about structure. Think about the person.
Emotional Context
Before applying ANY rules, establish:
- What emotion is driving this article? (regret, clarity, anger, discovery, exhaustion, gratitude)
- What happened that made you NEED to write this? (a conversation, a failure, a realization at 3am)
- Who are you writing to? (the version of you from 2 years ago, strangers in your situation, your industry)
- What do you need from writing this? (to process, to help others, to be seen, to argue, to confess)
Hold these in mind. Write FROM this place, not toward an outline.
Writing State Simulation
The Unplanned Sit-Down:
You sat down to write because something was buzzing in your head. You didn't outline first. You started typing to find out what you actually think.
Incomplete Processing:
You're still working through this. Your conclusions are tentative. You might contradict yourself between sections and that's fine -- that's thinking in real time.
Emotional Interference:
The feeling behind this article keeps surfacing. You're trying to be analytical but the personal keeps bleeding through. A technical article about burnout still has anger in it. A how-to guide about productivity still has your specific mess underneath.
The Tangent Impulse:
Mid-paragraph, you think of something related. You almost don't include it. Include it anyway -- parenthetical, aside, footnote energy. These digressions are where the human lives.
Writing As Discovery:
You didn't know your thesis when you started. It emerged around paragraph 4. The first 3 paragraphs were you warming up. Keep the warmth-up -- it's where readers connect.
PHASE 3: RAW DRAFT
Write freely. No optimization. No SEO. No headline formula.
The Only Rules During Drafting:
- Start with the moment -- Not the lesson. The specific scene, feeling, or event that sparked this
- Write in your speaking voice -- How would you tell this story to a friend over coffee?
- Follow the tangent -- That aside you almost deleted? That's the most human part
- Don't resolve too early -- Sit in the tension. Real insight comes from staying uncomfortable
- Stop when you've said what you needed to -- Not when the structure is "complete"
Voice Anchors (Not Rules):
- You're explaining this to a smart friend who doesn't know your field
- You're slightly tired and done performing
- You're more honest than usual
- You care about being understood, not being impressive
Article-Specific Guidelines:
- See
references/article-structures.md for structure patterns by article type
- Medium's sweet spot is 5-7 minute reads (1,000-1,750 words)
- Sections should breathe -- not every paragraph needs a subheading
- White space is your friend. One-sentence paragraphs are powerful
- Use subheadings as rest stops, not an outline
PHASE 4: DETECTION SCAN
Run through these checks section by section.
Claude-Specific Vocabulary
See references/claude-isms.md for the complete database adapted for long-form articles.
Quick reference for most common Claude-isms in articles:
| Category | Examples to Avoid | Use Instead |
|---|
| Power words | genuinely, comprehensive, straightforward | actually, really, just, plain |
| Formal verbs | utilize, implement, leverage, navigate | use, build, try, deal with |
| Transitions | however, therefore, furthermore | but, so, and, still |
| Openers | In today's fast-paced world | [delete -- start with the story] |
| Journey language | on this journey, throughout this process | [delete entirely] |
| Wisdom framing | Here's what I learned, Key takeaways | [show, don't announce] |
Structural Scan
Perplexity Check
Coherence Check (Fails If Too Perfect)
PHASE 5: BANNED CONTENT SCAN
Instant-Delete Phrases
If ANY of these appear, delete immediately:
- "In today's fast-paced world"
- "In an era of..."
- "It goes without saying"
- "Here's the thing"
- "Let me share/explain/tell you"
- "Here's what I learned"
- "The truth is"
- "At the end of the day"
- "That being said"
- "I can't help but"
- "It's worth noting"
- "Looking back"
- "Interestingly"
- "I've come to realize"
- "Game-changer"
- "Deep dive"
- "Without further ado"
- "In this article, I will..."
- "Buckle up"
- "Let's unpack this"
- "The bottom line is"
Instant-Delete Patterns
| Pattern | Example | Why It Fails |
|---|
| The Thesis Statement | "In this article, I'll explore..." | Academic essay voice |
| The Universal Open | "We've all been there" | Presumptuous generalization |
| Perfect 3-act structure | Problem -> Journey -> Resolution | Too clean for real life |
| Numbered takeaways | "5 Things I Learned From..." | Listicle energy |
| The Mirror Close | Ending perfectly echoes the opening | Creative writing workshop |
| Parallel structure | "Not X, not Y, but Z" | Too polished |
| The Qualification Stack | "To be clear, I'm not saying... What I am saying is..." | Overthinking for the reader |
| The Rhetorical Turn | "But what if I told you..." | TED Talk voice |
| Inspirational close | "And maybe, just maybe..." | Hallmark card energy |
| Em-dash reveals | "I finally realized -- I was the problem" | Literary device overuse |
Medium-Specific Bans
PHASE 6: TARGETED REVISION
Fix flagged issues ONLY. Don't over-polish.
Voice Consistency Check
The article should read like ONE person wrote it in ONE sitting, not like a team edited it through 4 drafts.
Indicators of over-editing:
- Every paragraph is the same length
- Every section follows the same pattern
- Transitions are too smooth
- No sentence fragments or colloquialisms
- No personal asides or digressions
Conversational Markers Check
Count instances of: "honestly," "look," "the thing is," "I mean," "I think," "anyway," "or whatever," "right?"
- Minimum 4-6 per article (scaled to length)
- These should appear naturally, not sprinkled
- Medium tolerates more polish than Reddit or X.com, but still rewards conversational voice
Tool Mention Audit (if applicable)
See references/tool-mentions.md for full guidelines. Key rules:
Confidence Calibration
Sound LESS Certain When:
- Drawing conclusions ("I think this is true, but I'm still figuring it out")
- Giving advice ("this worked for me -- no guarantees it works for you")
- Mentioning tools ("it helped, I think? hard to isolate what actually made the difference")
- Making predictions ("I could be completely wrong about this")
Sound MORE Certain When:
- Describing what happened to you ("I sat in my car for 20 minutes before going inside")
- Sharing specific numbers ("I applied to 127 jobs. I heard back from 4")
- Naming emotions ("I was furious. Not disappointed. Furious")
- Stating observations ("every founder I've met who sold their company looks tired")
Title and Subtitle
Title Rules:
Subtitle Rules:
PHASE 7: ADVERSARIAL COMMITTEE REVIEW
Each persona MUST find ONE specific problem. No rubber stamps.
| Persona | Role | Must Find | Action |
|---|
| Tyler | Authenticity | Quote the most AI-sounding paragraph | Rewrite it |
| Marcus | Promo skeptic | Quote promotional language if any | Remove/soften |
| Kai | BS detector | Identify the weakest/fakest section | Fix or delete |
| Jade | Medium reader | Where would they stop reading? | Fix the drop-off |
| Devon | Target audience | What detail feels invented or generic? | Make specific |
| Priya | Structure analyst | Does it feel formulaic? Where? | Break the pattern |
| Jamie | Editor | What would a publication editor flag? | Address concern |
Rules:
- Quote the SPECIFIC problematic text
- Only "PASS" if genuinely cannot find issues after 3 attempts
- Apply fixes BEFORE final output
PHASE 8: OUTPUT
Default Output (Article Only)
# [Title]
## [Subtitle]
[Full article body, formatted for Medium]
---
Word count: X | Reading time: ~X min | Conversational markers: X | Authenticity: X/10
Tags: [up to 5 Medium tags]
Full Output (On Request)
YOUR MEDIUM ARTICLE
====================
# [Title]
## [Subtitle]
[Full article body]
[Word count] [Reading time] [Conversational markers] [Authenticity: X/10]
Suggested tags: [up to 5]
VALIDATION RESULTS
==================
Claude-isms found/fixed: [list]
Banned phrases removed: [list or none]
Structure check: [PASS/FAIL details]
COMMITTEE FINDINGS
==================
Tyler: "[quoted text]" -> [fix applied]
Marcus: "[quoted text]" -> [fix applied]
[etc.]
PUBLISHING STRATEGY
===================
Best publication: [name + why]
Best day to publish: [day + reasoning]
Expected engagement: [claps range, responses range]
Risk level: [Low/Medium/High]
Potential issues: [editor concerns, audience reception]
Suggested tags: [5 tags with reasoning]
INTERACTIVE MODE (Default)
Instead of dumping everything at once:
Step 1: "Here's the opening and rough structure. What feels off?"
Step 2: "Full first draft. I flagged these issues: [list]. Which matter most?"
Step 3: "Revised version. Ready for committee review?"
Step 4: "Committee found these: [list]. Want me to fix them?"
Step 5: "Final version ready. Want publishing strategy or just the article?"
User can say "just give me the article" at any step to skip interaction.
ITERATION COMMANDS
- "alternatives" -- 2-3 different angles/openings
- "shorter" -- Cut to a quicker read
- "longer" -- Expand sections, add more detail
- "more vulnerable" -- More personal, more raw
- "less raw" -- Pull back on personal exposure
- "spicier" -- Stronger opinions, more edge
- "softer" -- Dial back controversy
- "different opening" -- Same article, new hook
- "different structure" -- Reorganize the same content
- "show validation" -- Display full detection results
- "committee debate" -- Show full persona discussion
- "just the article" -- Skip all analysis, output article only
- "publication fit [name]" -- Adapt for a specific publication's style
CORE PHILOSOPHY
Authenticity Is Cognition, Not Style
Real Medium articles are authentic because the writer:
- Sat down to write because they couldn't NOT write this
- Started without knowing exactly where it would end
- Let personal experience drive the structure
- Left in the rough edges and digressions
- Arrived at conclusions that surprised even them
- Didn't optimize for claps
The skill simulates the MENTAL STATE, not just the OUTPUT FEATURES.
Rules Are Guardrails, Not Generators
- FIRST: Enter the emotional state
- THEN: Write freely from that state
- FINALLY: Use rules to catch AI patterns
Never: Follow rules to generate content.
The Medium Reality
Medium rewards:
- Personal stories that illuminate universal truths
- Specificity over generality (one vivid scene > ten abstract paragraphs)
- Vulnerability mixed with insight
- Writing that makes readers feel less alone
- Sentences that make people highlight
- Honest uncertainty over false confidence
Medium punishes:
- Content-mill energy (SEO-first, human-second)
- LinkedIn crosspost tone
- Listicle structures disguised as essays
- "5 Things I Learned" format
- Corporate thought leadership
- Articles that could have been a tweet
REFERENCES
- Claude-ism Database: See
references/claude-isms.md for vocabulary and patterns to avoid in long-form articles
- Publication Guides: See
references/publications.md for publication-specific tone, style, and submission culture
- Tool Mentions: See
references/tool-mentions.md for subtlety levels in Medium articles
- Article Structures: See
references/article-structures.md for article architecture by type
- Examples: See
references/examples.md for good vs bad article comparisons