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Sometimes Writing Is Hard

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Sometimes writing is easy, when you feel deeply impassioned about something and know just how to say it. The words flow.  I think it was Truman Capote who said something like “I’ve always been able to throw words up in the air and have them come down in the right order.” Sometimes we can do that, too.

When you’ve emptied the passion bucket, maybe all you have to do is tweak a sentence or two, choose a better word here and there, correct a typo.  Then you go back over your manuscript and wonder where all those earth-shaking thoughts and sentences came from, and you sit back and bask in the glow of a job well done.

It doesn’t always work that way

Sometimes writing is hard work, when you feel as though you have nothing more to say, or when the right words – or even word – won’t come to mind. The cup is empty. The well has gone dry.

You sit there, staring at that blank screen or unfinished sentence, wondering if your word file clerk went on vacation.

What to do.

Have another cup of coffee. Take a walk. Call your best friend and chat a minute.  Try again tomorrow.

Sometimes that works.

A Better Idea

Sometimes starting a totally different project works. I’ve read about authors who have a couple or three different writing projects going on at the same time. When one fades, they work on one of the others. This may work well for nonfiction writers, who may have an interview, do research on another piece, and be putting the words in the computer for a third article, all on the same day.

Fiction block? Let the muse work. I think it was Phyllis Whitney who said she lies on the couch and visualizes the scene she is trying to write. She doesn’t write anything. She just watches the scene in her mind, expecting to find the words to describe it later.

Have the beginning down, but don’t know where to go next? I wrote a book once where I had the first several chapters done – and the last several chapters done. I thought I had a good beginning and I knew  where I was going to end up, but I was unable to connect the beginning with the end!

I signed up for an individual workshop with a creative writing professor at the local university and told him I wanted him to make me see this through. I met with him once a week with what I had written. I had to take something new each week, no excuses. I rewrote that middle section over three times, a new effort each week for three weeks, each one an entirely different approach – and finally found the right one! He gave me an A.

Not the most conventional way to finish a book, but it worked.

Sometimes ideas come in the middle of a wakeful night . Do you have your pad of notepaper at the head of your bed and one of those pens with the light in it so you can write in the dark? As they say, sleep on it. Sometimes something happens.

Maybe the idea you’re working on isn’t viable after all. Many a manuscript has ended all crumpled up in the wastebasket or the computer trash basket. You’ve got other ideas. Work on one of them. Start a whole new project. Begin again.

Something – eventually – will start your juices flowing again. Don’t give up.

What do you do?

If you have a way to break the word-jam, share it with our readers in the comment section. Let’s add a whole string of writer’s block ideas. Maybe one of them will work for you the next time you’re stuck.

Follow Peg Sias Lantz:
Peggy Sias Lantz is a native Floridian and lives on the lake settled by her grandfather in 1914. She is a jack-of-all-trades and has written hundreds of articles on many subjects and authored ten books, including Adventure Tales from Florida’s Past and Florida’s Edible Wild Plants. She also served as editor for the Florida Native Plant Society and Florida Audubon Society publications. She invites you to visit her website: peggysiaslantz.com
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6 Responses

  1. Katherine Dudley Hoehn
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    Thank you for this, Peggy. I enjoy your words of wisdom and connect with many of your thoughts. The hard parts of writing are part of the process. It will come!

  2. Charlene Edge
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    Love this post, Peg. Especially this: “Sometimes starting a totally different project works.” That’s been true for me more than once.

  3. Lee Gramling
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    In the days before computers Isaac Azimov had a semicircular desk with a half-dozen typewriters arrayed around it with a different project in each, and a chair on castors so he could glide from one to the other. Guy was a workaholic — only person I know of who wrote a FOUR VOLUME autobiography!
    –“Course he made lots of money at it and I don’t.
    I find just sitting down in the chair and starting out helps a lot. Ideas seem to come once you begin. Another story I recall was of a guy who kept procrastinating, “waiting for the muse.” One day he sat down at the keyboard and saw the muse sitting up on his monitor. “Where’ve you been? it asked. “I’ve been waiting for you!”

  4. Marie Q Rogers
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    When I get stuck, I turn my characters loose and follow where they take me. They generally know which way to go.

  5. Peggy Lantz
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    Thank you, Marie. You’re behind on your Blog reading, aren’t you? Anybody else want to add to the writer’s block solutions?

  6. Marie Q. Rogers
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    Yes, Peggy, I am behind on my reading. Too much going on. Btw, I have your book Florida’s Edible Wild Plants in my foraging library. Great book!

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