A truth exists in sales and toddlers that if you present a prospect with two choices, they are likely to choose one. More choices, however, does not encourage good decision making. In fact, once the choices number three or more, the prospect is less likely to choose any option at all but instead drop to the kitchen floor and bang fists on the tiles in overwhelm.
Hear me out on this one.
Creativity can explode when certain rules "must" be followed, rather than having the world of options open to you. This is true whether we are talking about factual reporting or formal sonnets in iambic pentameter or any number of other genres.
The framework frees the mind to flex and stretch its creative muscles, pushing boundaries and envelopes and conjuring all sorts of unexpected, playful language.
Consider a design contest for which my husband served on the judging panel.
The requirements stipulated that only three colors be used, and the fonts were likewise scripted. Otherwise, the field was wide open.
Far from being uniform, the best entries stunned with originality and creativity.
Why?
Because some choices were removed, the designers experienced no agony over choice A or choice B or choice Z for an unlimited number of possible decisions.

Image: scribbled lines
Rather, as designers, they built designs grounded in their knowledge of the tools at their disposal: the effects of particular color choices and the personality of the provided fonts.
Option limitation allowed the entrants to be wildly inventive in the way in which those tools were used to communicate a clear message and provoke an emotional response.
When you are revising, construct certain rules to follow, and follow them. Build those fences outside of which you will not permit yourself to go. Limit your choices in whatever way you wish.
Odds are, your result will surprise you—and discovery is the true joy, after all.