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   Writer s Block Recover From The Writing Disease

   By : Angela Booth  [Valid RSS feed]     Category Writing [Valid RSS feed]    Popularity 9 or more times read
   Date Published : 2008-05-30 05:54:08     Number Times Read : 12      
Among writers, there are often arguments about writer s block and whether it even exists. However, all writers will experience it at some stage. Here s how to handle it.

Writer s block manifests itself on a continuum which ranges from mild resistance to writing at one end, to the complete inability to even think about writing at the other end.

If you re experiencing resistance to writing, it s the mild form of writer s block. It often happens when you re missing a step in the writing process. For example, you may not know enough about a subject to be able to write about it with authority. Do more research, and you ll become enthusiastic and your block vanishes.

At the extreme of the continuum, when you re completely unable to write, it s because your life has changed in a fundamental way and you re highly stressed. You need to accommodate the changes, and get yourself mentally healthy enough so that you can write. With this debilitating form of writer s block, therapy can help, because such a block is often part of depression.

We can t deal with extreme writer s block in a short article, but there s a method to manage milder forms of writer s block.

Writing Resistance Managing your Writer s Block

If you re not writing, it s important that you don t try to confront your resistance head on. Chances are you ve tried that, and the more you try to write, the more you sit staring at the computer screen wondering what s wrong with you.

Here s a four step process which I ve used, and have recommended to other writers. It s worked for us, and it should work for you.

1. Don t Write at All for a Week

The first step is acceptance. Just accept that at the moment, you can t write, and give yourself a break from writing for a week. Put off deadlines. Write email messages, but let all your other writing go.

Think of your writer s block as a form of writing flu. You re sick, but you re healing, and you ll feel better in a week.

2. Go on a Trip, Take Your Pen

The old saying, a change is as good as a rest is true. On the weekend, take a trip. It can be a short trip, but go somewhere you ve been meaning to go. If possible, go alone. Take a camera, and a notebook. You don t have to write, but take some pictures.

3. Accept Your Fear

During this self imposed writing drought, you ll experience many emotions: fear, guilt, anger, and apathy. Although they re unpleasant, these emotions are good for you they re a sign that you re releasing your resistance. So don t resist the negative emotions: allow yourself to feel them. Breathe deeply, and the surges of emotion will pass.

4. Get out of Your Head and Into Your Body

Emotions arise in your body, and trigger thoughts. Try to stay with the sensations in your body: the feeling of the emotion in your body the tightness in your chest, the hollow pit in your stomach, the heaviness on your shoulders.

Take deep breaths, and allow the feelings to pass don t get caught up in your thoughts about the feelings.

When you begin to experience the surges of emotion in your body, your writer s block is almost over. These surges are what you ve been repressing: they form your writer s block. There s no way to release them except by feeling them fully, and letting them go.

At some time during the week, after the strong emotions subside, you ll feel like writing again you ve recovered from the writing disease.
Article Source : Article Directory Online: Free Online Article Submission
Author Resource :
Want to write more? Angela Booth's writing class, "Write More And Make More Money From Your Writing: Develop A Fast, Fun Productive Writing Process" at http://www.angelaswritingclasses.com/Class/writemore.html is based on lessons she developed for her private coaching students.

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