In school you learned to write down everything you know about your topic.
In real life, you won't get a kiss on the hand for this. On the contrary: you'll get a slap in the face in the form of yawning readers.
Completeness kills reader interest.
This is a law of nature.
Why?
Because reading is about kenya telegram screening association. While people are reading your text, their brains are processing information. And not just the information that is in the text. The brain calls up what it already knows, what it has already seen, heard, smelled, felt and thought about what it is reading.
The trick is not to write everything possible about your topic, but only what is not yet stored in the brains of your readers. Everything else is boring.
Antoine de St. Exupéry, the author of “The Little Prince” put it this way:
“Completeness comes not when you can no longer add, but when you can no longer take away.”
Do I get an amen for that?
Remove any information from your text that your readers already have.