By Master isolated images, published on 01 March 2011 |
It may be sacrilegious for a writer to say this, but I have
come to believe that the old foe known as writer’s block can be a good thing.
When I am plotting or writing a story I will come to a point where writer’s
block will suddenly shoot out of my unconscious and bring my muse to a halt. It
is inconvenient, especially when I am working on a deadline. But, despite the
pain the reason for the writer’s block is important. Why?
There is an egoism that comes with writing. We, as creators
get lost in our writing. We write things that our readers don’t read. We write
the unimportant things and sometimes fall in love with. These passages feel important to the writer
because it gets our character from point A to point B in our story line, but it
is unimportant to the reader. The reader will at best skip them and at worse
close our work and move onto some other story.
When I start writing this type of section, I hit writer’s block.
Actually, I don’t hit it—I crash into it like a jet plane that was going Mach
speed.
Despite how important or fantastic I think what I am trying
to write is or how important I think it is to the reader, the unconscious side
of me knows it is a huge mistake. Some would say to write it anyway and edit it
out later. At least in my nature if I leave it in for later editing too much of
it will stay in. Instead, I listen to this instinct that raises the writer’s
block. I will sit and ponder and try to figure out what it is that was
important in what I was writing and see if there is another way to address
it. Sometimes that means moving on to another
side project—like this blog is today. Sometimes it means doing something else
entirely—for myself martial arts practice or throw darts, etc.
What are the reasons you run into writer’s block and what do
you do to overcome it? Do you find it helps your writing or a hindrance?
Please visit www.davidalanlucas.com
and www.thewriterslens.com. You can also follow me
on twitter @Owlkenpowriter and the Writer’s Lens @TheWritersLens. You can also find me on Facebook at www.facebook.com/DavidAlanLucasAuthor.
Also,
check out Write Pack Radio at http://www.blogtalkradio.com/writepackradio
or on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/pages/Write-Pack-Radio/258130144353624
or on twitter @WritePackRadio. Write Pack Radio brings Pop Culture, Writing,
and Publishing together and throws them into a crucible of humor, clarity, and
passion.
Fiction is the world where the philosopher is the
most free in our society to explore the human condition as he chooses.
You can buy one of these! http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00A31GCEO
ReplyDeleteFunny! I might have to buy one.
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