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Winning Against Writer's Block

Posted by Susan Fenn on October 13, 2009 at 10:39 PM

It happens to the best of us. You're happy, enthralled with the genius of your ingenuity, and writing as fast as possible. The ideas are flowing like the Mississippi during the rainy season. Then out of nowhere, WHAM! All the beavers in America decide to dam your creativity. You shake your head to clear your mind, unsure of what just happened.

And then you stare numbly at your computer screen. Your mind freaks out as you realize that the villainous writer's block has struck. That thought leaves you debating whether or not you should whack your head into the keyboard. Or maybe you feel like the ink in your pen has dried, there's lead missing in your mechanical pencil or the lead in your normal pencil is so brittle nothing happens but breaking as you try to write and your fifty miles from the nearest office supply store.

What's a writer to do? The only thing we can. Crawl into a ball, roll around on the floor, and then moan, groan and whine to anyone who will listen. Down fifty cups of coffee, blame your sister, mother, brother, father, best friend, boyfriend, girlfriend, husband, wife, and/or children and then get over it.

GET OVER IT?!?! You would at this point scream at me for not sympathizing. But, I can't. The only thing that can cure writer's block is to WRITE.

Before you ask, no I haven't lost my mind. But, I have learned (strictly through trial and error) that you have to FORCE the creativity. Find writing prompts. Literally type "writing prompts" into your search engine and just wait to be bombarded as the results fly in. Then pick one that doesn't want to make you hurl obscenities at the author (i.e. What did you do for summer vacation?) and pound out the words. If that doesn't work, flip through a magazine, newspaper, old book and write down any words that "jump out" at you and merge them until you can write a sentence. If that doesn't work, just write over and over and over again "I do not know what to write." or "This is stupid, why do I ever listen to Susan." and you could even try, "I will write today." The point is, you are telling your spoiled, always gets its way, 2 year old mind who is boss. It says you can't write, you say you can. Let's see who wins.

After a few hours, days, or even weeks you will BREAK out of the trap of writer's block. You will be able to stand on your desk chair, recliner, kitchen chair, or even coffee table and give out a massive war cry as you pound the writer's block to the ground. Showing that you have taken over the world and you are no longer afraid of the blank page, the empty screen or the pen with dried out ink!

Categories: Writers Block

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1 Comment

Reply Dorothy L. Abrams
04:06 PM on October 16, 2009 
A mentor shared this technique with me. It works when you are stuck for any reason. Write out 16 questions about your chapter, or essay. Start with the who, what where why how when questions. Go on to what ifs, but dig up 16 things you'd like to know about the character or what happens next. Then cross out 3 that's don't fit with the others. Maybe 5 if they seem out of place. The answer them short form in a couple sentences.

For example, Why was MC ducking her new boyfriend? Because he intends to break the law and withhold the Treasure from the authorities.
Where can she hide? in her flat, but not for long.
Who helps her? The committee on antiquities and Minerva
What does she intend to do about the cache they found? report it but without possession of the coins and icon who will believer her? (Ah another question out of the short answer.)
When will she do that? she has 2 weeks, but the longer she waits the more trouble it is.
How can she get to the office without the cop boyfriend catching her? take a bus to the rental agency then rent a car if she acts fast before he gets those bolt holes covered.
What happens if he gets there first? He may discredit her as another crazy American before she makes the report.

And so on. When you have all the questions and all the answers, organize them in some logical manner and write it out. You can always change your mind and re write, toss the whole thing out or turn it on its head. The important thing is the exercise gets you unstuck and moves what you know in the unconscious to the conscious.