Writing is a job. It might be just your hobby, but some days it’s still hard work.
It’s amazing, a privilege, the best job ever, but still it can be a struggle.
I’m a firm believer that writing is a superpower we can all embrace to achieve our goals.
It can even get us our dream life if we really focus.
First off, full honesty, I hate the term writers’ block. You never hear of plumbers’ block, or road workers’ block or truck drivers’ block.
They have a job to do, and they do it. Seems like many writers agree with me.
‘All writing is difficult. The most you can hope for is a day when it goes reasonably easily. Plumbers don’t get plumber’s block, and doctors don’t get doctor’s block; why should writers be the only profession that gives a special name to the difficulty of working, and then expects sympathy for it?’
Philip Pullman
Myths
One writing myth is that we all sit on a sunny cliff top or in an Instagram ready, candle-lit study with a cat on our lap and tap out a novel a week. A best seller, of course.
Social media is full of beautiful images of desks, with cat and coffee to perpetuate the myth. Some do work that way, but mostly we don’t.
We graft and create page after page of words we will later relegate to the trash bin. Oh, I’ll come on to that later.
It’s a Job
Writing is work, just like the office job you escaped from or the study you thought was a thing of the past. You will need to work at it.
Some days you won’t want to. That’s fine. Walk away.
But if this is your dream job and you want to be a professional, suck it up and do the work.
‘I don’t believe in writer’s block. Think about it — when you were blocked in college and had to write a paper, didn’t it always manage to fix itself the night before the paper was due? Writer’s block is having too much time on your hands.’
Jodi Picoult
But it’s Hard!
But what about on those days when you sit down, and nothing happens?
No ideas. No words.
You make coffee, clean the house, walk the cat, get lost down the rabbit hole of social media.
You dive into the search engine rabbit hole. Look up, again, how you can dispose of a body or how long it takes to reach Mars. Strictly for research, of course. We’ve all been there. But that book won’t write itself.
Stream of Consciousness
One way to work past that ‘block.’
Sit down.
Find a blank page on Scrivener, Notes, Word whatever your chosen manuscript of choice and write.
That’s it.
It’s not rocket science.
So here’s a trick I learned when I was a student, in my 40s not teens!
You ready?
It works!
Just write.
Yep, just write!
It can be about anything but type words OR handwrite words, but write.
Create a stream-of-consciousness piece. Tell a story. It can be literally anything.
Tell the computer or page how you feel, what the weather looks like, who your main character’s sister is dating.
Literally anything.
It can be any old rubbish but just let go, don’t hold back, just go with what your brain delivers to your fingers.
By engaging your brain in the creative process but allowing it to lead you, it’ll create something unique.
‘I don’t think “writer’s block” actually exists. It’s basically insecurity, it’s your own internal critic turned up to a higher level than it’s supposed to be at that moment, because when you’re starting a work, when the page is blank, when the canvas is open your critic has to be turned down to zero… The point is actually to get stuff on paper, just to allow yourself to kind of flow. It is only by writing that you’ll discover characters, ideas, things like this.’
Philipp Meyer
Take a Day / Hour Off
It might be an idea to avoid your current work in progress completely for a day or two, but know you will have to go back to it. If it’s the right book.
If you are truly stuck, maybe that book is not the one you should write, not right now, at least. There is no shame in putting it away and writing another genre or story. You can come back to it later, or not.
This is one reason I’m an independent author. Well, more than one, but stick with me here. I choose what to publish and when.
If you have a deadline or contract to finish, as I mentioned earlier, you will need to suck it up and write. Unless you approach the editor or publisher and discuss options.
The sitting down and writing, this stream of consciousness can kick-start you past the so-called, self-imposed block.
‘I never get writer’s block, because I always have a good dozen projects that I’m working on, so if something isn’t working I’ll just switch gears.’
James Patterson
Timed Sprints
Another way to reboot your creative genius?
Set a timer on your phone or computer, and type or write.
Many writers now do groups timed sessions via Zoom or on YouTube. It works. Pick up the pen or tablet and write. I can almost guarantee you’ll beat the timer and keep going.
Still Stuck?
Move. Do yoga. Go for a walk. Grab a dictating device and walk around the block or just around the room.
Get some fresh air, move your laptop to another place. Break the routine.
You get the idea.
A Harsh Truth
Writers are the only trades who allow themselves the myth of a block.
You may need to take a step back. Revisit the reason you do the job in the first place, but if you want to write as a career, you need to find your own way to write each day.
‘Amateurs sit and wait for inspiration, the rest of us just get up and go to work.’
Stephen King
Of course, some days will be boring, others simply difficult or stressful.
If you seem to have forgotten how to write, you can always go back to the grind of the 9-5 or get a job cleaning toilets to remind you of the total privilege it is for us to say out loud, I’m a writer.
There is no shame in taking on another job of any kind, to supplement your income until you succeed as a writer. It could give you some characters to write about and remove the stress that caused your ‘block’.
Oh, and whilst I’m here, and as I suggested earlier.
Please don’t send your precious, if unloved-right-now, words to the trash bin!
Create a folder for deleted scenes and character detail.
Your words are valuable, and you might use them later.
They are brilliant snap-shots to reboot your creativity, give to fans as secret background info on characters or plot or might even become the start of that spin-off series.
This is far from a comprehensive ‘block-breaking’ list, so tell me, how do you reboot your writer’s brain?
Want to Talk About It?
I offer 1-2-1 chats and consultations, just get in touch!
TIP JAR
Enjoy this content?
Maybe we can share a coffee?
https://www.buymeacoffee.com/Christieadams




