Curing Yourself of Writers Block
Curing Yourself of Writers Block by Devin
Hansen
Whether you write longhand or use a word processor, a time will
come when the words won't come. The empty page gapes before you, a
vast expanse of space that seems impossible to fill. Your mind
seems thick and heavy, and yet your thoughts are racing: I can't do
this any more. I used up all the words, every last one. And the
most maddening thing about writers block is that once upon a time
you could fill up the page and it was easy.
Causes of Writer's Block Stress is one cause of writers block. Yes,
there are dozens of legends about famous writers being able to
write thousands of words a day while deeply depressed and high on
booze or tranquilizers. Legends are exceptions, and should be
regarded as such. For most writers, stress about jobs, the rent
money, relationships, and ordinary life creates a mental stew that
is detrimental to the act of writing.
Boredom Boredom is another cause of writers block. The computer
desk starts to resemble a cage after awhile, and soon the words
curdle in your mind and disappear before they ever make it to the
page. The boredom syndrome is possibly the easiest form of writers
block to contract, but it is also the easiest to treat.
Fear Fear is another big one. The writer is afraid of looking like
an idiot or screwing up, which is understandable. Less
understandable is the writer who is afraid of success or perhaps
afraid of the self-discovery that writing promises. Yes, it is
possible to fear something new, even if it's good, and sometimes
that kind of fear is very difficult to overcome. Perhaps the worst
fear is that of rejection, which can strangle the creative
flow.
Cures: All of the cures for writers block boil down to addressing
one of the three big causes: reducing stress, relieving boredom or
eliminating fear. You can find hundreds of suggestions in writer's
guides or on the Internet, and they all work one or more of the big
three. Here are some examples.
Reducing Stress Schedule a block of time for your writing. The idea
here is to give yourself permission to write and not worry about
the time that you're not doing something else. Does it work? Sure.
Make that appointment, scratch that, make that date with yourself
and show up.
Create a quiet space for your writing, someplace where you can shut
out the world and focus on your imagination. This reduces stress by
using the out of sight/earshot, out of mind principle.
Change your day job. If you hate your job, get one you like. It
sounds easier said than done, but many times making that leap will
lead to great benefits in the future. The amount of stress you take
home from a job you cannot stand is very corrosive to the creative
process in the long run.
Relieving Boredom Move your writing desk. Even if all you do is
turn it around 180 degrees, the change in your writing environment
can shake you out of the doldrums which may be causing writers
block. A related cure is to switch your writing time, if possible.
Swap your morning writing hour for a time later in the evening.
Try a writing exercise. Here's a simple one. Get a paragraph or so
of narration, yours or another writer's, and re-type the piece
starting from the end and working your way back to the beginning.
As you work through the exercise, allow your mind to follow the
twisted meanings that the reversed word order creates.
Eliminating Fear Research your topics. When you don't research your
subjects enough, deep down, you are afraid of revealing your
ignorance. If you're afraid of looking like an idiot, do some more
research and eliminate that possibility. And this advice works for
fiction writers, too.
Separate the writing from the editing. Composition is not the time
to be afraid of making mistakes. Worry about fixing the details
after you gotten the big picture. Writing, especially the first
draft, is all about broad strokes. Come back to polish after you
have a rough draft. If you've got a case of writers block, you're
not alone. Virtually every writer has contracted writers block.
Your writing is not hermetically sealed away from the rest of your
life. What you do away from the keyboard will affect your writing
either for good or for ill. If you look at writers block as some
strange version of the canary that miners carried down in the dark
to warn them of dangerous conditions, you'll not only get the words
flowing again, you'll also improve your life.
Devin Hansen: owner of SEO Copywriters
http://www.seocopywriters.com, a web-content development company
based in Illinois . With a staff of American writers and editors,
they produce high-quality, unique content for any business in any
industry. Writers
Block
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