Words of Wisdom on Writer’s Block

Woman with writer’s block.

Writer’s block—is it real? Is it why writers get stuck when writing, or can’t get started?

Today’s Words of Wisdom tackles writer’s block, with posts by Kathyrn Lilley, Elaine Viets and John Gilstrap. Afterwards, I give my own short take on it, and then open the floor for questions.

I never used to understand what people meant by “writer’s block.” I’d always felt immune to that scribe’s disease. When I wrote the first two books in my current series, I had a machine-like discipline. I’d get up at four a.m. every morning and write for at least two hours. No. Matter. What. My progress was always slow but steady. I wrote almost the same number of pages every day. My writing group members were in awe of me.

But then along came Book Three, and I went into a bit of a slump. Actually it felt more like an avalanche. Even though I loved the story I was working on, sometimes I’d find that days would pass without any progress at all. I eventually had to ask for–gasp!–an extension from my editor, who graciously granted it to me. But even then I kept running behind. Ultimately I made the new deadline, but barely. Now I have a recurring nightmare about missing the deadline, which has replaced my old nightmare about discovering that I’ve missed an entire semester of a class, just before the final exam.

So what exactly is writer’s block? I think the term is a bit misleading. It implies that the writer doesn’t know what to write about — such as a lack of inspiration, perhaps. In my case I knew the story I wanted to write, but I seemed to have lost the daily writing rhythm along the way. Maybe what I had was actually energy block. Or focus block.

So here were a few of my cures for The Block. All of them proved to be helpful at times:

  • Write 15 minutes a day
    You can write for at least 15 minutes today, even if you’re the busiest person on the planet. Doing that small amount per day helps you get the habit and rhythm back. Over time, your progress will add up.
  • Write at the same time each day.
    I think this is the single most helpful habit that will enable you to break through writer’s block. If you sit your butt down in a chair at the same time every day, your body starts to learn that this is the time for writing. Your writing flow will start to kick in at that time.
  • Free writing
    This technique is where you grab a couple of random words and “free write” them into your WIP for a set amount of time. Actually, this one has never worked that well for me. Whenever I try free writing, I get stuck at the same damned spot that I’m stuck in my regular writing. And then I get even more depressed about my writer’s block. But I know that free writing works wonders for some people. For great tips about free writing and other ways to break through The Block, I recommend Barbara DeMarco-Barrett’s book, Pen On Fire: A Busy Woman’s Guide To Igniting The Writer Within. (Guys can pick up a few tips too!)
  • Put your writing first
    I have many acquaintances who have endless reasons for not writing. Anniversaries, birthdays, conflicting deadlines, vacations, relatives visiting…you get the idea. Unsurprisingly, these people are frequently blocked writers. Your writing needs to be a first priority in your life, or you’ll be doin’ time inside The Block.

Kathryn Lilley—June 16, 2009

 

My grandfather was a security guard. He worked weekends, holidays, and nights when temperatures plummeted below zero and frozen winds blasted the empty parking lots. He never said, “I don’t feel like guarding the warehouse tonight. I’m blocked.”

My grandmother babysat. She never said, “I’m not watching those brats today. I’m blocked.”

When I spoke at Fort Lauderdale High School, a student asked, “What do you do about writer’s block?”

“Writer’s block doesn’t exist,” I said. “It’s an indulgence.” Writing is a job, and working writers cannot afford writer’s block. It’s a luxury. Pros know that inspiration won’t strike like lightning. We can’t wait for it to hit us. We have to write.

I wish I had a dollar for every day I didn’t feel like dragging my sorry carcass to the computer. I could retire.

But I write because it’s my job. Even on the worst days, I love being a writer.

Many former newspaper reporters become mystery writers, including Michael Connelly, Kris Montee (PJ Parrish), and me. We’re trained to respect deadlines. Writing is our work and we sit down and do it. Early in my newspaper career, I told my editor, “I’m blocked. I can’t write this story.”

“Write something,” he said, waving the blank layouts. “We have pages to fill. We’re a newspaper, not a high school theater program: We can’t leave blank spaces on the page with ‘COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND.’ ”

Some days, the words flow, gushing in fertile streams. I feel alive and electric. Other days the words trickle out like water in a rusty, clogged pipe.

But I still write.

What do I do when the words don’t come?

I remember what Daniel Keyes, who wrote Flowers for Algernon, said at a speech:

“When I feel blocked I start typing – anything,” he said. “It doesn’t have to make sense: ababababsjsjsjfjfjfhhshshshkaka.

“Then I start typing words. Any words. The first words that come to mind.

“Next I start writing sentences. Again, they don’t have to make sense. But I keep on typing and eventually they do make sense and I’ve started writing. I may throw out ninety percent of what I wrote that day.

“But I wrote.”

You can, too.

Elaine Viets—March 10, 2016

 

Truth be told, I don’t believe in writer’s block.  There are days when the creativity feels like it won’t flow at all, and there are certainly days when I would prefer to do something other than tying my backside to the chair and hammering out words, but that’s what everybody feels about any job on some days.

“Writer’s block” is, I believe, too often an excuse to be wielded on those days when a writer would prefer to play hookie.  There’s nothing wrong with playing hookie, but whilst playing, it’s disingenuous to complain about not getting stuff done on your manuscript.  There truly is no substitute to a writer writing, even when the words don’t flow easily.

I think of creativity as a flow, and the writer as the pump.  When the pipes are filled and the pressure is even, creativity pours out of us, sometimes in such volume that we can’t handle it all.  Then stuff happens in our lives or in our surroundings that causes intellectual cavitation, and our pump loses prime.  All that flow reduces to a pool, and it’s hard work to get it going again.

Everybody has a proprietary secret sauce to re-prime their own pipes, but one that always works for me is to return to the basics: pen and paper.  I posted a video on the topic on my YouTube channel.  I don’t know why it works, but somehow, the tactile connection between my brain and the page, flowing through an old-fashioned fountain pen, never fails to set me straight.  For every book I write, I’d guess 20% of the prose starts as being written longhand.  Once the story is flowing again, I type up the handwritten pages and I’m off and running.

John Gilstrap—June 20, 2018

***

My personal view is that “writer’s block” is really fear, perfectionism, and/or the inner critic keeping writers from starting or stopping them cold mid-draft. Daring to write a crappy first draft can help. Simply letting yourself write, as all three of today’s WoW posts advice, is golden. Deadlines can also “unblock” a writer.

Feeling blocked can also be a message from the writer’s unconscious that there’s a plot or character issue that needs to be worked out. My go-to in that case is brainstorming, which was featured in a WoW post last December. Going up to what I call the “thirty thousand foot view” of my novel and sketching out the big picture story elements and/or revisiting advice on plotting, such as this JSB’s post here, usually helps fix whatever the problem is.

How about you?

  1. Do you believe in writer’s block? Or do you think something else is at work?
  2. What do you do when you can’t get started, or become stuck mid-draft?
  3. Any general advice about dealing with fear, perfectionism, or how to muzzle the inner critic?

I’ll be on the road for most of the day, but will pop in when I can. In the meantime, please share your take on writer’s block.

This entry was posted in Elaine Viets, John Gilstrap, Kathryn Lilley, writer's block by Dale Ivan Smith. Bookmark the permalink.

About Dale Ivan Smith

Dale Ivan Smith is a retired librarian turned full-time author. He started out writing fantasy and science fiction, including his five-book Empowered series, and has stories in the High Moon, Street Spells, and Underground anthologies, and his collection, Rules Concerning Earthlight. He's now following his passion for cozy mysteries and working on the Meg Booker Librarian Mysteries series, beginning with A Shush Before Dying and Book Drop Dead.

23 thoughts on “Words of Wisdom on Writer’s Block

  1. I recently taught a workshop on Writing Through The Wall – getting through writer’s block. It is a thing, but it can be overcome. My two go-to strategies are free writing by looking at a picture and writing 300 words about it and writing in my journal about how I feel about my WIP and why I hate it.

  2. I don’t know why this quote from Ferris Bueller pop into my head but I am going to leave it here:

    Not that I condone fascism, or any -ism for that matter. -Ism’s in my opinion are not good. A person should not believe in an -ism, he should believe in himself. I quote John Lennon, ‘I don’t believe in the Beatles, I just believe in me.’ Good point there. After all, he was the walrus. I could be the walrus. I’d still have to bum rides off people.” — Ferris Bueller

  3. Dale, excellent collection from Kathryn, Elaine, and John.

    Like Elaine, deadlines cure writer’s block for me but only if they’re set by an external source–an editor, a critique buddy, etc. Self-imposed deadlines don’t work. I’ll let myself down but I won’t let down someone else. Hmm, what does that say about me?

    • Debbie, I have the same challenge. External deadlines work so much better for me than internal ones, thought they can also be a source of stress. I like your point about not letting yourself down not being an issue—making it a concern could be the way forward for both of us.

  4. I have two serious accountability partners I meet with virtually once a week. We don’t chat, snack, or anything like that. We keep our fannies planted in our chairs for two hours straight, cameras on. Even when I don’t feel like writing or I’m stuck, I know THEY may be stuck, too, so I suck it up and type out SOMEthing. Our agreement to gather weekly and write forces words onto the screen.

  5. Writer’s block happens to everyone whether they acknowledge the term or not. You can’t always write when, where, how you want to. That’s a perfect life and I don’t know anyone with a perfect life.

    For me, the better question is simply “how much will you write”. If I allow writer’s block to defeat me for too long I should expect that I won’t get all the stories written that I want to write. Whatever decision I make, I have to live with.

    I have not found any easy solutions for getting stuck mid-draft. Sometimes I just simply need time to clear my head and have to ride it out. But of the solutions mentioned in today’s post, writing in small 15 minute increments has been the most helpful to me. Since the #1 problem with writing for me is lack of time, I need to keep coming back to that 15 minute increments approach, blocked or not. And handwriting is a big asset to help get the flow of words going again.

    RE: perfectionism: that’s not so much an issue for me when drafting because I know I’m just trying to get the words spit out on the page, but in revision? Oh my.

  6. I’m also a former newspaper reporter who became a fiction writer. I lived by deadlines for 10 years. Sit down and write the story–no excuses–sometimes with very little time to breathe, let allow procrastinate. Then I spent 20 years in public relations, working special events nights and weekends while raising 2 kids and occasionally paying attention to my husband. I wrote 11 novels during that time by writing at the crack of dawn, late at night, and squeezing it in after chauffering, doing laundry, cleaning house, going to church, and cooking on the weekends. Consequently I don’t recall ever having writers’ block. Some days are better than others, but I do treat it like a job. Sit butt in chair, do the work, because I’m still so thrilled after all these years, to be living my dream of being a full-time novelist. And writing is so much more fun than any job I’ve ever had in my life!

  7. Sometimes life is hard. We lose people we love and it’s hard to create in those times and we have to give ourselves grace. Time to recover.

    Does that mean we don’t even try? I don’t think so. The fifteen minute deal is what gets me back in the discipline of writing. It’s like that movje–if you build it they will come–if you sit yourself in front of your computer or with pen and paper in hand and write anything, the story will come…eventually.

    • So true, Patricia. Life can be very challenging at times—we’re going through that right now here, but, as you say, we still continue to try. 15 minutes can make all the difference, and really, that’s a coffee break’s worth of time.

  8. Thanks for the shout-out, Dale. One thing I’d add. If you are seriously blocked, try a change of scene: go for a walk, run an errand. I like to sit in a McDonald’s and listen to people talk. That can jog me back into writing.

  9. I love what Elaine said: “Writer’s block doesn’t exist,” I said. “It’s an indulgence.”

    Sometimes I’m filled with creative ideas, and I can’t wait to get to the keyboard. But other times, I’m just mentally dry and have to drag myself to the laptop. When I get to the point where I find more satisfaction in folding the laundry than in writing, I know it’s time to go for a walk or jog.

  10. Sorry I’m late, Dale! Like the WoW and your advice, I believe we can have a creative blockage, but we must push through it, no matter how painful it feels to birth words on the page. The most important thing is to write… something. Words will flow again.

    • No apology needed, Sue! Thanks for dropping by! I think you hit the nail squarely on the head—the most important thing is to write *something* and the words will begin to flow.

  11. Pingback: About This Writing Stuff… | Phil Giunta – Award-Winning Writer of Fun, Frightening, and Fantastic Tales

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