When a page struggles, it rarely needs more sentences. It needs a better line. Not a slogan. Not a flourish. A simple, true line that carries the purpose of the page on its back. Once you have that, paragraphs fall into place more willingly.

Spend a few minutes today hunting for this line. Write many versions. Test them by asking what they ask you to do. A good line clarifies action. A weak one invites drift. When a line makes you sit up and reach for the next sentence, keep it.

Place the line at the top of your workspace. Let it act like a north arrow. Each time you feel a pull to the side, look back. Does this sentence help the line. If not, cut it or set it aside for another day. Cutting is not loss here. It is a way of protecting force.

Carry the line out of the page and into the project. Clear writing helps beyond the document.