Breaking Writers Block
The most fearsome enemy to any writer, attacking without warning, without predjudice and without compassion, is (gasp, dare I say it?) WRITERs BLOCK.
I feel a bit like Harry Potter speaking Voldermorts name aloud to the horror of his fellow witches and wizards.
Writers Block is a curse to creativity. Its as if all the characters and situations and what if scenarios, which normally ricochet around your brain have been sucked into a worm hole leaving only a void behind. Its painful, its frightening and its self inflicted!
Writers Block is the residue of fear. For me, it is the fear of not being dazzling enough. For you it can be fear of exposing yourself to criticism, fear of rejection, fear of humiliation, fear of failure, fear of success, the list could go on and on. Regardless of the fear that keeps you its prisoner, Writers Block is your prison.
Its instant to conquer your fear and get back to the business of writing.
Begin by identifying what is holding you back. As I said, Im afraid of not being sizeably workable enough. To counter this, I use a technique called costless writing. I ruminate on
a situation and then write continuously for ten minutes, without stopping, without censoring any word or phrase or thought. Knowing that mistakes are acceptable, that the objective of this exercise is quantity not quality frees me from my prison.
Use every opportunity to write. If you have stalled on a novel, write a short story, an article, a poem, write in your journal, write a description of the checker at the grocery store, give her a name, a bio, a lifeThe idea is: JUST WRITE. I stall when editing. Sometimes I just cant look at the story any more. I get so frustrated, I just want to chuck the whole thing and beginning over. At times like this, its better for me to turn my attention to a short story or write an article. Before I understand
it, Im relaxed and confident.
Last, but not least, READ. Reading a grand book always inspires me. Imagine if JRR Tolkien let fear stop him from writing. What the world would be missing! Every book is full of lessons you may apply to your craft. You might
read a book and see the way a particular writer develops characters, overcomes obstacles or weaves their words. You may find tools to make use of
and traps to avoid in your own work.