By Terri Blackstock
I
used to think that writer’s block was an excuse that new writers used to
procrastinate. I thought that if they had bills to pay and a tight deadline
schedule, they would be more motivated. However, after thirty years of writing,
I’ve found that writer’s block is a very real obstacle. Sometimes plowing
through it is as difficult as slamming your body through a brick wall. Because
I’ve written more than seventy books back-to-back over thirty years, I’ve had
to develop ways to break through this mental wall. Maybe some of these will
help you.
1)
Get
rid of distractions. I know that sounds like a no-brainer. We don’t often
invite distractions into our lives; they just have a way of dropping in like
viruses. But for me, one distraction can ruin my whole writing day. There are a
few things you can do to clear your day of them. First of all, tell your
friends and family not to call or text you during the hours you’re writing.
Unplug the landlines and silence your cell phone during that time. Schedule any
appointments or errands for the time after your writing hours. If you have
small children and you have a couple of free hours to write, then don’t use
that time for anything else. Let the laundry and dishes wait—take your shower
later—and don’t run errands during that time even though it seems like the
logical thing to do. Use it exclusively for writing, then run your errands with
your children when they are with you. It may be more stressful, but I find that
I’m most calm when I’ve had a good writing day.
2)
Try
dictating. There are times when the blank screen on my computer seems like my
worst enemy. If I can find another way to write the book my creativity returns.
I hate first drafts, and my writers block almost always emerges during the
writing of one. Dictating often helps. I can go out to my car and sit in the
sunlight or drive down the road with the voice recorder in my hand, or
people-watch in a parking lot (in a non-creepy sort of way). I use a voice
recorder that’s compatible with Mac Speech Scribe (for PC users, Dragon Dictate
does the same thing), and when I’ve dictated a scene, I plug the recorder into
my USB port and let the app transcribe it. It’s usually a mess without punctuation,
but I still have the voice file to refer to as I clean it up. Then I have my
scene down. I will rewrite in another draft, but just getting it down on paper
is like knocking a small hole into that brick wall.
3)
Read
a great book in the genre you’re writing. It needs to be a book that inspires
you, is beautifully written, and is written in the voice or tense that you’re
using. When I do this it almost always returns my voice to me. If I immerse
myself in a great book, afterward I find myself writing in my head even when I’m
not thinking about doing it.
4)
Change
your writing location. Sometimes when I’m sitting in my office I get writer’s
block because of all the distractions around me. There are piles of papers that
need attention, bills to pay, dust bunnies that need vacuuming, the telephone’s
ringing. I’ve learned that if I can change my location it sometimes shakes the bricks
free. If I go into the living room and curl up by the fireplace, or sit in my
car outside with the windows down, or go sit in a noisy café, or even drive
across town to a park with a nice view, it helps my creativity and focus.
5)
Write
something else. An email, an essay, a letter to that person who made you angry.
Just get out whatever it is that’s hovering in your mind, whatever it is that’s
clogging up your access to your story, and write it in a stream-of-consciousness
way without any judgment. Often, once you’ve finished, you’ll be back in the
rhythm of writing and you can jump back into your book. (By the way, you might
not want to send that letter you just wrote!)
6)
Change
the sounds in your environment. If you normally like the TV off, turn it on. If
you usually prefer writing to music, turn it off. Sometimes background noise
helps to silence the distracting thoughts in your head, but often the noise you
usually like is becoming a distraction. Whatever you normally do, try doing the
opposite until you get through your block.
7)
Take
a few days off. If everything I’ve suggested above doesn’t work, it may be time
to just shut it off and quit demanding it of yourself for a day or two (or
maybe a week). Do anything except write. Let your brain rest. Then when you’re
rested, pick it up again and see if the wall is still there.
These are all things that
have worked for me. If your writers block is a temporary affliction that rises
up now and then, one that you can bulldoze through because your passion for
writing is greater than whatever obstacle stands in your way, then you’ll be
fine. During first drafts, I hate writing. It’s not magical or mystical or muse-inspired. Writing is hard work, and sometimes I just don’t want to
do it. But the reward of a good writing day is so much greater than the
frustration of getting those words on paper. Sometimes I just have to take my thoughts
captive and remind myself that I’ve knocked down that wall before. I can do
this. Louis L’Amour said, “Start writing, no matter what. The water does not
flow until the faucet is turned on.”
_______________________________________________________________________
Terri Blackstock is a New York Times best-seller, with over seven
million copies sold worldwide. She is the winner of two Carol Awards, a
Christian Retailers Choice Award, and a Romantic Times Book Reviews Career
Achievement Award, among others. Her most recent suspense novel is If I Run, about a young female fugitive
whose being accused of a heinous murder.
Other books include Truth Stained Lies (the Moonlighters Series),
Intervention (the Intervention Series),
and Last Light (the Restoration
Series). See the complete list of Terri’s books at www.terriblackstock.com/books. Join her at
Facebook (www.facebook.com/tblackstock) and Twitter (www.twitter.com/TerriBlackstock).
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