This is a new piece by Miz Sarah Harris on a topic I'm sure we
all struggle with, even if writing is not your primary profession
like me. Please enjoy, and be sure to make her feel welcome
by dropping a comment below. Writers come in all
shapes and sizes. Hardcopy, web, journalism, fiction,
blogs… They all have something in common.
Writer’s block. This is
especially painful if you depend on the written word for your
income, or you depend on the written word to market your income
(bloggers, I’m looking at you.)
You need to produce those
words and they need to be substantial, make sense, be
engaging, and be on time. You need to be on topic,
investigative, original, and be of real value. You sit down
to work and nothing. Nothing is flowing. The angles
don’t come; the words are trite and bland. The idea you want
to express just hovers out of reach.
Writer’s
block is extremely frustrating both personally and
professionally. When your words and thoughts become stagnant
and dull, YOU feel stagnant and dull. How do you fight your
way out? How do you find your way back to creativity and
inspiration?
The most important thing to
investigate if you’ve been suffering from writer’s block for a long
time is your health. Are you getting enough sleep and eating
right? Do you need to see the doctor? Has something
disruptive happened in your life? If any of this is true, you
need to take the proper steps to correct it. Now.
Next, just write. I know, I know. You can’t
write – that’s the problem! Switch gears.
Write about something else. Write something
not meant for publication. Describe in detail what happened
when you woke up today. What color were your pajamas?
What did you put in your coffee? What color was
the mug? Just how annoying is your neighbor’s dog? The
idea is to put you into a completely different mind space than what
you’re blocked about. It will reinforce the fact that yes;
your brain can still produce words.
Think about what inspires
you. It can be something completely frivolous, such as
a daisy. It can be something as huge as the existence of
life. Artwork, scenery, tranquility, the woods, the
mountains, the ocean, the color pink… Do whatever you can to
get yourself into that space. Buy the daisies and put them on
your desk.
Plan a trip to the ocean or museum. If
you can’t stand the city sounds and find them distracting, plan a
day trip to the country (and make sure that laptop or notebook goes
with you.) Put yourself in the atmosphere conducive to your
own inspiration.
Write down the blurbs. You’re
waiting at the red light and a sentence or thought pops into your
head. Write it down. Be sure to keep a notebook with
you at all times so you don’t lose the opportunity. Sometimes
a thought just strikes us, we don’t
write it down, and by the time we get to
our office, the thought is lost.
And so are you.
These are wonderful little opportunities to catch your ideas that
come when you’re thinking about something else.
Use a
schedule. Some people prefer
freeform writing when the urge
takes them. But what do you do if the urge doesn’t
strike? Set up an appointment with yourself each day.
Set parameters, 4 hours, or 500 words, whatever works for your
style. Then write about that neighbor’s dog.
You have
to be consistent. But the more you find your surrounding
inspiration, and the more you
implement varying ideas, the more you’ll train yourself to produce
those words and use those hours. Your brain will understand
that NOW it’s time and go to work.
Switch to a different
project. It seems simplistic, but if you have multiple
projects, perhaps you just need to switch to a different one
altogether for a time. Stop trying to force the issue, and
come back later. It could just be that you have competing
thoughts warring their way out of your head.
Whether you’re
promoting your business via a blog, writing a technical
manual, or writing the latest greatest fiction, sometimes it all
just stops working. Your
creativity is blocked, so your
words are blocked. Implement these strategies, and get back
to work. You have a deadline, after all.
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