Posts Tagged ‘Writer’s Block’

Breaking Your Writer’s Block in 5 Easy Steps

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It is one of the scariest things a writer has to face – writer’s block. You stare at the white sheet of paper, tapping your pen, and spacing out as you try to think of what to write. Looking at the blank page only reminds you that your mind is blank with ideas, too. The problem with writer’s block is that once a person feels stumped, they have a hard time forcing themselves to write anything at all. Quite often, some people even say they have writer’s block just to have an excuse not to write. Writing takes work, concentration, and creativity. Whatever your reason is for feeling that you have come down with writer’s block, here are some simple steps to help overcome your own block.

Step #1 Prewrite

Yes, you hear your instructors tell you all the time to prewrite, but do you ever listen to them? Prewriting (which is listed in another blog) is not just a way to organize your thoughts and get down ideas, it is another way to look at your writing project and force yourself to write. Getting past your writer’s block is often just a matter of looking at your task from a different perspective (or looking around your writer’s block, if you will). If you can brainstorm or outline some ideas for your writing, then you have a better chance at feeling confident and putting your pen to the paper to start writing. With all of the different methods of prewriting, there really isn’t any reason not to use at least one of them when you’re stumped.

Step #2 Write Backwards

Even after the prewriting is finished, you may still feel uncertain how you want to word your thoughts exactly. If that’s the case, jot down your ideas out of order – write the end first and the beginning last if you must. Sometimes your ideas may be scattered, which is why you are having trouble focusing on just one idea. Maybe your mind is blank with your introduction, but you know what you want to write for your body paragraphs. If that is the case, then just skip ahead. Write down whatever good ideas you think you have and reorganize them later.

Step #3 Take Your Opposing Side

If you are really uncomfortable with your topic and feel you have absolutely nothing to write about, then you may want to take yourself out of your own head and put it into someone else’s. This has nothing to do with cheating. You are supposed to write the opposite of what you really feel. Or, think of what other people would say about your subject. It may be easier putting down what you think other people feel or believe than what you actually believe. Your confidence in your own ideas may be what stops your writing. Do not use this technique all of the time though. There are some assignments where you need to give your honest opinion, and this method of breaking writer’s block may not always be suitable.

Step #4 Just Write!

It may sound harsh, but sometimes you just have to force your pen to move on the paper or to have your fingers move across the keyboard. Often people refuse to write anything because they don’t think their ideas or words are good enough. Well, when you’re struggling, writing something is better than writing nothing. Put down whatever comes to mind whether or not you think it sounds good. You can always fix it later, which is how we come to Step 5 in breaking the writer’s block.

Step #5 Walk Away… and Come Back

Sometimes students are just not in the right state-of-mind to write. If there are a bunch of things running through your head, you may need to just set up your writing assignment as best as you can and walk away from it for a while. When you come back to whatever writing you have put down, you may feel more inclined to fix your ideas and even add more ideas down on paper. Depending on how much time you have for your writing, walking away from your assignment for an hour or a full day may be just what you need to come back to your writing and look at your project with a clear head. When you come back to your writing, look it over with a critical eye, as if it were someone else’s paper, and see what you do and do not like about it. And then, take your writing from there. Unless you are taking an in-class essay, this method can be a great way to clear your mind. Otherwise, you’ll have to rely on a different method of break down that writer’s wall.

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10 Tactics for Fighting Writers Block

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By: Garin Kilpatrick

Writers Block is a formidable foe.  The following 10 tactics will help you fight writers block and get started on your writing project!  Way back in my high school days I remember having to do stream of consciousness writing projects in class.  These were simple exercises where we wrote down whatever streamed into our brains.  This task helped me come to realize that having great writing is not the most important part. Having great Editing is. If you have suffered from writers block in the past, don’t worry, the problem was all in your head. Take these next 10 tips to heart, clear your mind, and get ready for worry free writing!

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Writers on Writer’s Block

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I wish there were some sort of organic chocolate-flavored laxative for writer’s block, but unfortunately for writers, there isn’t. Most writers, at some point or another, complain about not being able to write. The writers who claim they don’t ever have writer’s block are usually laughable lazy terrible less critical writers. Prolific writers like Danielle Steele might come out with several books a year, but no one could ever, with a straight face, compare her to someone like Dorris Lessing.

Some writers, notably famous authors and those who have the option of writing leisurely, can afford to suffer from short bouts of writer’s block. Others, like you students, don’t. For you, deadlines exist, regardless of whether anything exists in your empty document. And, seriously, I get your pain. As a student, whenever I had writer’s block, my grade was docked for turning in assignments late, despite the fact that I came up with some pretty demented explanations for my lateness, which included everything from fictionary dead relatives to hospital trips for imaginary kidney stones to every type of disgusting indigestion/food poisoning imaginable (I assumed that if I grossed my teachers out enough, they wouldn’t pry too far into my reasons for needing an extension). Weirdly, I had the imagination to invent whole scenarios explaining why my paper wasn’t done, yet no mental capacity to actually sit down and write it. And, no surprise, my teachers never bought my excuse. In fact, I probably offended their intelligence by even assuming that they would.

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