Pages

Thursday, October 26, 2017

Ten Ways to Beat Writer’s Block

with Erica Vetsch and friends!




Happy, happy birthday, SEEKERVILLE! There are so many things that make this place special, and I have to give a shout out to the original Seekers. You ladies are the epitome of what it means to be godly women. The love you have for one another, the way you support, pray for, encourage, exhort, and hold one another accountable, that’s true Christian love in action. And that you carry that out in discipling others in not just writing, but in Christian faith, shows your hearts. Ten years is something wonderful to celebrate, and I hope I’m around when you celebrate TWENTY!  

And now on to our topic for the day. 

Writer’s Block. 

UGH. Dreaded, obstinate, soul-sucking writer’s block. That wall you hit when you sit down to write and realize… “I got nothin’.” How do you break through it? Do you just wait? Is there a formula to follow, a button to push or key to turn?

I wish. 

There are, however, some things you can do to help alleviate the problem of Writer’s Block, and in keeping with the “TEN” theme of the month here on Seekerville, here are ten ways to beat the Keyboard Paralysis that comes with Writer’s Block. 

(Also, in keeping with spirit of #2 on the list, I consulted some of my favorite writer peeps who have lent their expertise to this thorny issue. At the end of the post, you will find their smiling faces and links to find them online. Seriously, check them out. They’re AMAZING authors and even better people!) 


Ten Ways to Beat Writer’s Block




1) Do Something Else/Walk Away

“When I’m stuck on a plot, I go do something else, something completely different from writing. Stroll the farmer’s market, watch birds, bake a pie, do a little cross stitching, pick some wildflowers, solve a logic problem—and let your mind wander.”  Susan Page Davis
“Quit writing. I know. Sounds stupid, but seriously, sometimes you need to take a break. I'm talking short break here, not years. Take a day or two off to regroup and put your mind on something else. Visit a museum. Bury your face in a book. Get outside and go hiking. Sometimes all it takes is a little space.” Michelle Griep 


“Practically speaking, if I need to write and the words seem to be stuck, I try to shake them loose with a little activity. Maybe it’s a walk (I’ve heard that green and blue are creative colors) or just dancing around my house or even doing the dishes. A change of location and some motion can get the creative juices flowing.”  Liz Johnson


“The first thing is to "step away from the computer/laptop/tablet." Just walk away. Even if you're on deadline and the book is due in two hours!  Go for a walk, put on some music that inspires you, and get outside. There's something about the out of doors that sweeps away all those cobwebs in my brain. While I'm walking, I pray for God's help, and then listen to music and think about my storyline and characters. Usually, somewhere after the first mile, I get the inspiration I need.” MaryLu Tyndall

As you can see from the number of replies on this one, it’s a very popular method. Sometimes we need to let our story breathe, let our brains percolate on the problem, and ‘turn the channel’ for a while in our heads without stressing. 

2) Brainstorm with Someone 

“I like to brainstorm one-on-one with another family member. My grandson Caleb is high on my list, along with son Jim, daughter Megan, and husband Jim. I tell them where my plot is bogged down, and they usually have some ideas on how to get things rolling again. I don’t always use their ideas, but it gets the juice flowing again.” Susan Page Davis

“Talk it out--One of the best ways I've found to clear plot hurdles is to leave my own personal brainstorming session and get others involved. It can be your critique partner, your writing mentor, even a supportive family member or friend. Share your story problem and listen to their suggestions, even if they're different than the direction you intended to take. Sometimes, non-writers come up the best ideas!” Amanda Barratt

I love to brainstorm. My daughter is usually my sounding-board in this, as well as a couple of writing friends. Face-to-face brainstorming is always best for me, but in a pinch, email/messaging/face-timing works, too. There’s something about tapping into another person’s creativity that helps release my own.



3) Focus on the Emotions, yours and your characters’

“Focus entirely on emotions, my own and the characters. Nothing about plot, only how I feel, and lay that on top of my character. This usually gets the creativity juices flowing.”
 Peter Leavell 

Even though Peter is the only one to voice this particular method in my entirely unscientific and random-ish poll, I think he’s hit on something vital here. Readers read fiction in order to have a powerful emotional experience. Often when we face writer’s block, it’s because we have either sucked all the emotion out of a scene or story, or we’re too scared to write the emotions we know the scene needs. Either way, examine the emotions in the scene. Tap into the emotion, and the words will come.

4) Kill Your Inner Editor

“Kill your inner editor. Go ahead. It's not a felony. Most often when I can't seem to put a word down on the screen it's because I'm afraid to. I want to put out genius prose and words that make people weep. I expect perfection out of myself. But doggone it, no one is perfect and neither are our words. Just getting something down is better than nothing because you can't edit a blank page. Use your editing time for polishing up those sentences.”  Michelle Griep


Oddly enough, I blogged about this very topic once here on Seekerville here.  

 Years ago, when I first attended a local NaNoWriMo group, the leader had us do the most ridiculous exercise that I felt at the time was an awkward waste…and yet, it turned out to be awesome. We were told to draw a picture of our inner editor on a 3x5 card, then seal it into an envelope (duct tape works great!) with instructions to not let that little monster out until after NaNo was over! As goofy as this sounds, it works! Try it! You have my permission to put your inner editor into a soundproof jail until you have that first draft done.

5) Recognize Your Writer’s Block as Writer’s Fear

“Fear of failure. Anyone who’s ever done something creative has hoped it would be well-received and feared it wouldn’t. And sometimes that fear becomes so overwhelming that the words stop coming altogether. When fear blocks my creativity, I remember one crucial truth. No failure is final. Max Lucado wrote about that, and he would know. Just ask him about the 14 publishers who turned down his first book. But he didn’t give up. He kept trying. And the 15th publisher offered him a contract and changed the landscape of Christian publishing forever. He kept trying, and I will too.” Liz Johnson

This is HUGE! So often, when I face writer’s block, it’s because I am afraid. Afraid that I have written myself into a corner I can’t escape. Fear that people will finally realize I’m a fraud who can’t write her way out of a wet tissue paper bag. Fear that the story is too big, the emotions too grand, for my abilities. Fear that I can’t meet deadlines or reader expectations…fear, fear, fear.  That will stifle your writing quicker than Sugar won the Derby! And most of our fears are lies anyway. Stop listening to lies. Preach the truth to yourself. You are a writer. You are creative. You are able to produce excellent fiction. There. Now go do it!

6) Stop Comparing your work/results negatively with others’

“Sometimes writer’s block comes from comparison, especially when I compare my writing process with how my friends craft their books. Somehow my methods always seem to fall short, and I worry that I’m doing this whole writing thing wrong. And that’s when the words seem to stop. And when that happens, I try to focus on the parable of the talents. Jesus told the story of a master, who gave each of his three servants a different gift. And he expected each servant to use the talent given him. So I remember that my job isn’t to use my friend’s gift. It’s to use mine.” Liz Johnson

Or you could take a totally different spin on comparison… (Trust Peter to do it backwards!)
“I pick up a book I know I’m going to hate. The writing is terrible. The plot is horrid. The characters are insipid. And I read until I fling it against the wall, knowing I can do better. Then I write.” Peter Leavell

Negative comparison will create a desert in your creative soul. You will become a dry, barren, thirsty land, craving what you don’t have. Stop. It. Right. Now. The way God deals with someone else’s words and writing career are HIS business. Carping and whining about it won’t help you. Root out envy. Celebrate with your fellow authors…put yourself in their place only long enough to ask yourself what would you like to hear from others if that writing success milestone was yours? Then go do that thing. Send the congratulatory email, put that ‘props-to-you’ post on Facebook, then get your little hiney back to work on your own project, knowing that God can do great things. Even for you!

7) Quit Stalling

"I don’t believe in writer’s block. To me, calling a problem “writer’s block” is another excuse for stalling—for not writing. I find that putting my butt in the chair, opening the file, and placing my fingers on the keyboard, makes the words come. They don’t always flow like sparkling gems, but words come, and words written are words that can be edited. Coming to a snag in a scene is like finding an unexpected detour while driving. You’re forced to take an unplanned turn, which makes your navigation system recalculate. A technique I use when I’m stuck in a scene is to type a couple of asterisks and move on to a place where I know what’s going to happen. Forward motion is the key. Later, after I’ve had time to think (and I’ve put some space between myself and the page), I come back and reevaluate it. Usually by then I’m ready to move forward." - Cheryl St. John, Write Smart, Write Happy, Writers Digest Books 2/17

Are you paying attention here? Because this is a shaft that drives straight to the heart of a lot of ‘Writer’s Block’ issues. It’s called stalling. Because we don’t want to do the hard work. Because writing is supposed to be FUN, right? And it is. It’s fun, and it’s pea-pickin’ hard work. A lot of people I encounter love being part of the writing world, but they don’t actually write. They talk about writing, they spend money on writing-related things, but they don’t write. They want to ‘have written’ more than they want to write. And they often claim they’ve hit a patch of ‘writer’s block’ because that sounds so bohemian and artsy and writer-ish…but it’s really just another excuse. Don’t be that person. Put your tookis in the chair and put some words on the page!



8) Go Back to the Beginning and Work the Plot

 "There might be a hundred different reasons the words don’t flow. Maybe you didn’t plan the story well enough, so you don’t know where you’re going. Maybe you failed to create enough inherent conflict to sustain the plot. If the story isn’t working for you, take it apart, analyze it, and put it back together. See it as a challenge, a place to improve the story. It’s not time to stop simply because it’s hard. Writing is always hard." - Cheryl St. John, Write Smart, Write Happy, Writers Digest Books 2/17

Often when I hit a sticky patch when words aren’t flowing, it’s because I have sucked all the tension out of my plot. There’s nothing driving the story forward. That’s when I go back to the last place in the story that made sense, that felt right, that had me on the edge of my seat, and I search for where I got off track. This is hard work, because sometimes I have to axe a TON of words, but it is worth it. Once I stop dodging the tension, stop coddling my characters, and really put them through the wringer, the words flow!

9) Do Something Else Creative

“Give yourself a creative boost- When the deadline approaches and you're pushing to get words in, sometimes it's easy to let the creative well run dry. Pick up that new novel by an author that inspires you (extra points if it's in a different genre than what you write in.) Watch a movie or TV show that you wouldn't usually pick. The relaxation of focusing on another person's creative output instead of your own, plus immersing yourself in a different media experience, can get those creative wheels rolling smoothly again.” Amanda Barratt 
“I read or watch an entirely different genre than I write, and stumble across a plot line I’d like to incorporate into my work.” Peter Leavell

“Try listening to an audio book. Not just any audio book, but a book you love, a well-written story that moved you.” MaryLu Tyndall

I employ this one, too. In my case, I crochet, sew, cross-stitch, scrapbook, or quilt. I do something creative that is not writing related, and that often triggers a fix to a plot problem or refills my creative reserves. Sometimes I read history books. (Yeah, I know, but for me history books are exciting idea factories.) If you’re feeling creatively exhausted in the word department, get out some colored pencils and a coloring book. Dig out that needlepoint project you buried in the closet. Watch that movie that always makes you cry or laugh. Fill up the tank again.

10) Pray for Inspiration

As mentioned in MaryLu’s advice under point one…prayer. Praying for inspiration and help is never wrong. There are a lot of things that contribute to writer’s block, and some of it has nothing to do with writing at all. Real life can intrude. Family tragedies, natural disasters, financial struggles. And we pray about those things, naturally and with regularity. But God doesn’t want to be God of only part of your life. He wants it all, including the writing. And not just control of the results, but also of the process. That means He wants to hear from us when we’re struggling. Pour out your heart, your desires, your willingness to be led to God. He will hear. You will cast those cares upon Him, knowing He cares for you. Ask Him for fresh words, and then sit down and do the work.

 So, there you have it. Ten ways to beat the dreaded Writer’s Block.  I encourage you to click on the links below and visit the fine authors who helped with the information of this post, and I’d love it if you’d visit www.ericavetsch.com and sign up for my quarterly-ish newsletter! 


Visit Susan here.
   
Visit Michelle here.

  
Visit Liz here.


Visit Cheryl here.

  
Visit Amanda Here

Visit MaryLu here.
Visit Peter here.

I would love to hear from you on how YOU conquer this awful beast called Writer’s Block. 
And I’d love to give away a “Hot off the Presses-Not-Yet-Available-to-the-General-Public” copy of A Child’s Christmas Wish to one commenter! (Winner announced in the Weekend Edition.)

Seekerville wants to thank Erica and friends for joining us today and we'll be giving away an additional copy of A Child's Christmas Wish (when it becomes available) to a second commenter because it's our birthday and we can!

A Child's Christmas Wish

A Baby for Christmas 

The only Christmas gift Oscar Rabb's four-year-old daughter prays for is one the widower can't provide: a baby sibling. And when his neighbor's house burns down, he's willing to open his home to pregnant and widowed Kate Amaker and her in-laws—but not his heart. Even if his little girl's convinced Kate's unborn child is the answer to her wish. 

Kate quickly sees the generous but aloof Oscar has little interest in growing closer to his houseguests. Still, she intends to make the coming Christmas a season to remember for his daughter. And as Oscar starts to open up to her, Kate can't help picturing just how wonderful the holidays—and a future together—might be.


Best-selling, award-winning author Erica Vetsch loves Jesus, history, romance, and sports. She’s a transplanted Kansan now living in Minnesota, and she married her total opposite and soul mate! When she’s not writing fiction, she’s planning her next trip to a history museum and cheering on her Kansas Jayhawks and New Zealand All Blacks. You can connect with her at her website, www.ericavetsch.com where you can read about her books and sign up for her newsletter, and you can find her online at https://www.facebook.com/EricaVetschAuthor/ where she spends way too much time!





150 comments:

  1. Hi Erica baby! Miss you.
    I'm with Cheryl on this one, though I'd put it another way.
    I power through. I pull up that old saying, "You can't fix a blank page."
    I write the scene even if it's terrible, and move on to what's next, then come back and fix the damage. So much easier than creating for the first time...well, no not easier...I mean so much easier than creating PERFECTION the first time.
    Power through.
    Get your words down.
    I just wrote a scene like that and it's about 200 words and it oughta be a whole chapter, maybe 3000. Well, we'll see. I'll go back later...I promise.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ditto. Traveling and on phone but I laughed when I read Cheryl's. And realized anew why we get along. No whining! My kind of woman!!!

      Delete
    2. Hey, Mary, darlin' it's been way too long! I agree. Too often we use 'writer's block' as an excuse. Finger paint that first draft if you have to, then get on with polishing and editing it into shape!

      Delete
    3. Ruthie, Cheryl is a diamond of the first water! :)

      Delete
    4. I agree. At a certain point, you just have to get back to it. Period. One way or the other.
      KB

      Delete
  2. Erica, I love that fingernail picture. In my mind I always associate you with pretty nails.

    Writer's Block is a tough one. I brainstorm with my sis (she's a much better plotter than me) or I make a list of things I want to have happen. Often just having a short bulleted list keeps me focused and moving in the right direction. I'm not blocked because I know where I'm going.

    Reading, watching a movie or adult coloring doesn't work for me. I become too absorbed in what I'm doing and forget all about writing.

    I also get great ideas in the shower. Sounds strange but I've heard other authors say the same thing.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ha, Terri. I associate her w/pretty nails too. Red ones....

      Delete
    2. Terri, the shower seems to inspire lots of authors...I wonder if it's because it's one place we turn off all the electronics and noise and finally let our minds wander around our stories?

      Delete
  3. Welcome to Seekerville, Susan, Michelle, Liz, Cheryl, Amanda, MaryLu, Peter and Erica!!

    I either take a nap or a shower which always provides a break through or I work on another scene.

    Instead of focusing on what I don't know in the story, I focus on what I do know.

    I will say, that I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE Peter's suggestion.

    Pumpkin bundt cake and apple streudel. Let's start pigging out early, shall we? Coffe in on!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Peter's suggestion blew me away, too! It gets right to the heart of the matter, doesn't it?

      I made pumpkin bundt cake last night! :)

      Delete
    2. Tina, I love that. "Focus on what I do know." Priceless! And as we celebrate the 10th birthday, not lost on me that Seekerville is FREE.
      KB

      Delete
    3. No yearly dues or fees. hahahahaha

      Delete
  4. Erica, my posse Boss!! Love seeing you here on Seekerville :-)

    Ya'll know I'm not a writer, but again some of these principles can apply. Do something else or walk away, I gotta do that too occasionally when I need a break from something. Gets my mind off of what I'm doing and on to something mundane that doesn't take require a lot of thinking. Then I can get back to what needs to be done feeling refreshed.

    I had to laugh when I read what Michelle said "Kill your inner editor. Go ahead. It's not a felony." I can apply this to negative thoughts or like I like to think of it, taking my thoughts captive. Not allowing them to hinder me in any way. I'll have to remember Michelle's saying :-)

    Stop comparing....yeah, that's a biggie! I used to be really bad about comparing myself to other Christians. Maybe I don't have a big role in the church, but I do my part. God has given each one of us different talents, abilities, strengths and etc. My talent isn't Sally's talent and vice versa...and that doesn't mean we are LESS in God's eyes. I see the church as a puzzle and each individual as a piece of that puzzle, God knows how to fit each one together just right. Just do what YOU know to do and HOW you know to do it :-)

    Lastly prayer...it's huge! It should play the center role in your life.

    I love this post! Erica, you got some great points and it sounds like you've learned these in your writing life. I'm sure our authors will love these too!

    Tina I'll take a slice of the cake and some of the streudel and a cuppa joe. Just toss my name in for Erica's paperback (even though I have a digital copy)...there's nothing better than a real book in hand :-)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey, Trixi! You're right, so many of these points can translate into other parts of our lives. Comparisons, running on the hamster-wheel of negative thoughts, needing to pray. :)

      So great to see you here, Trixi!

      Delete
    2. Trixi, I didn't stop comparing myself to other people -- parents, writers, Christians in general -- until I was in my 60s. Then I decided that God made me the way I was for a reason, wish I'd realized it younger. Oh well, people are living longer now...
      KB

      Delete
  5. Just excellent, Erica and everyone who contributed their words of wisdom to this great post!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey, Carla! I love these writer-peeps. It's so much better to travel this writing path with a hoard of good friends who are always ready with words of wisdom.

      Delete
  6. Erica, I have to tell you that the photobomb picture is one of my favorites of alllll time.

    Good times, girl. Good times.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. We all look extremely happy in that picture, don't we? LOL

      Delete
    2. Yeah, that thing keeps popping up! LOL Like me!

      Delete
  7. Hi Erica:

    As retail advertising copywriters, with many deadlines every day, none of us could afford to have writer's block.

    We all used the 'stream of consciousness' method of just writing anything that came into our heads, page after page, single space, until someone 'up there' would step in and say, "Oh Lord, just give me that keyboard" and the muse would always come back on the job.

    It always worked for all of us. We always felt that this was like banging the piano keys within the hearing of your music teacher. At some point they always come back in to restore order. :)

    BTW: you were one of my favorite authors from the house that became Truly Yours Digital. I'd be interested in knowing how you find writing for Love Inspired different than those books?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey, Vince! Stream of consciousness writing is a great way to unstop the brain. For me, getting the first 500 words of the day out seems to free things up and make things flow.

      Thanks for the kind words re Truly Yours/Heartsong. I loved writing for them! Writing for LIH is a bit different, though the actual writing is much the same. The differences come in editorial, cover art input, etc. Both are great, just different. :)

      Delete
  8. What a great post!! Thanks to all of you who had input. Fantastic advice.

    I think my favorite piece of advice you shared that addresses my type of block was Max's "No failure is final." I need to stick that beside my keyboard!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey, Missy! I have a paper star stuck to my filing cabinet with a quote from former Chicago Bears coach Mike Ditka, "Success isn't permanent and failure isn't fatal."

      That encourages me and reminds me to keep things in perspective.

      Delete
    2. Erica, I love that!! Maybe steal that one. :)

      Delete
  9. I am not a writer but so no writer's block for me. I do find that if I am stuck upon anything I do something else to clear my mind.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Mary! Yep, sometimes just switching gears can get you unstuck!

      Delete
  10. Great post, great advice. Thank you. I love the statement about killing your inner editor and the one about drawing a picture of your inner editor placing it in an envelope and sealing it with duct tape. My inner editor has always been a thorn in my side. It's hard to turn it off. While I am currently in a season of not writing, when I come out of this season my inner editor will be tucked away quite nicely in a padded envelope and duct tape...then maybe I can get to "the end" without 'her' butting in.

    Happy Birthday Seekerville!

    Blessings,
    Cindy W.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Cindy W., love the image of inner editor in a padded envelope and duct tape! Great way to put it! This time of year, I'm also considering putting her in a coffin.
      KB

      Delete
    2. Hi, Cindy, Yep, as silly as it sounds, that simple exercise of clamming up my picky old inner editor worked great! I hope you have the same success stifling her!

      Delete
  11. Thanks for sharing all of this terrific advice, Erica.
    Music always gets me unstuck or a run on the treadmill.
    Happy birthday, Seekerville!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Jill! Music is a great way to awaken our creativity, isn't it? I am amazed that musicians can tell an entire story in a two or three minute song, packing it full of emotion at the same time.

      Delete
  12. Thank you for your post, Erica!

    I am huge fan of changing what I'm doing to shake up my writing if I get stuck. I tend to get great ideas when I'm vacuuming or in the shower...at one point in my life, I had a set of bath crayons to jot down ideas on the walls. :) Some of which survived, some of which got literally washed down the drain.

    I also like to watch a historical movie with my pups to get the juices flowing again if I write myself into a corner (since I'm a pantster), and sometimes when I'm writing romantic suspense and it gets dry, I kill off another character. Granted, you can't get too carried away with that one, but it does shake up the plot. :)

    Thank you again for a wonderful list, and happy writing,

    Jeanine

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Jeanine! I love the bath crayon idea!

      And killing a character always 'livens' things up! LOL Did you see what I did there? I slay me!

      Delete
  13. Thank you Erica and friends for this list. It is very helpful. I'm getting better at doing some of these things. I find many days are productive while others I fight to do much.

    I would love to have my name in the drawing for your upcoming release. Christmas books are a favorite.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Bettie, writing can be a bit of an uneven seesaw, can't it? I find very few things help me focus and pound out the words like a deadline...but if I don't have one, I find it difficult to discipline myself to stay on task!

      Which is a whole other topic...

      Delete
  14. Love this post! Great points. Your new book sounds great. Love the cover. For writers block, sometimes a good run is needed to clear things up.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Sally! I love this cover, too! The little girl in the cover, her mom contacted me on FB, and I was able to send them a copy of the book (and some stickers for the little cutiepie) and they sent back a video clip of her opening the book. So sweet! And she's just perfect in the role of little Liesl in my story!

      Delete
  15. Hi Erica!!!

    Good stuff in your blog post.

    Great to see you here.

    ReplyDelete
  16. Good morning, Erica & Company! Great tips!

    If I'm stalling out, a walk or doing a little yardwork can help--or writing a scene out of sequence, then later going back to the scene that's tripped me up. Sometimes just sitting down and writing ANYTHING that isn't my current WIP helps--or re-reading what I've written so far so I can again pick up the 'magic' I started out with and can better see how I've gotten myself bogged down.

    Long-term "writer's block" can also be related to health issues, life circumstances and crises, a need to step back and better take care of yourself for a bit so the creative juices can start flowing again. Refilling the well, so to speak.

    Thank you for joining us today!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Glynna, thanks for mentioning the health issues. Sometimes we do need to step back. It's different for each of us. Referring back to Sandra's Tuesday post, We Will Know.
      Kathy B.

      Delete
    2. Hey, Glynna! You're so right that health and life-crisis things can keep us from our writing. Stepping back can be just the thing we need. :)

      Delete
  17. Hi Erica! Thanks for this great list. #2 is my favorite thing to do when I'm stuck. I love to brainstorm, and I'm fortunate to have several good writing buddies who are always willing to help me out. I will confess, #4 is my biggest struggle. I have tried for four years to kill my inner editor. My only excuse is that I'm a language arts teacher, so editing is a habit. :(

    Have a great day, Seekerville! I'm off to the day job.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey, Rhonda! #2 is my favorite, too! It is such a blessing to have writer-peeps to bounce ideas off, and to have around to tell me when my ideas are completely bonkers! :)

      Delete
  18. Erica, these are good tips. I like to seesaw between projects and aspects of projects, i.e., if I'm blocked on a chapter I work on another one or line edit something I've already done. I also use asterisk when I'm stuck on something, I figure I can always come back. And I'm a huge fan of multiple projects, though I know that doesn't work for everybody. Yu can alsways do something about something.
    Sometimes you do have to power through, especially on deadline, and that's when it's helpful to remind ourselves that surgeons don't have surgeons' block and postmen don't have postmen's block.
    A good way to PREVENT write's block is to think in advance about what you'll be writing, so when you sit down at the computer it's at the tip or your fingertips. I do it while I'm driving, which is why I have points on my license. Do as I say, don't do as I do.
    I'm also a fan of getting away from the computer, but I make it do double duty, a trip or an outing with a loved one.
    Thanks.
    Kathy Bailey

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Kathy! Pre-writing is so helpful to me, having a plan and knowing where I'm supposed to be going with it! (Not that it always happens that way...but still!)

      Delete
  19. Hi Erica. Thanks for the good tips and for bringing your friends.

    So far (I hate saying that!) I get writers block more frequently with my non fiction than my fiction. When that happens I usually have a stack of periodicals I've ignored, so I clear off time and immerse myself for a couple of hours. It usually does the trick but I have more severe methods I write about horses. If reading about them doesn't work then I'll go to the barn and spend awhile cleaning equipment or the dirtiest horse I can find. If that doesn't clear my mind the horses are always very willing to leave me other things to clean on their behalf.🙄
    This great fall weather causes real conflict for a writer/horselover.
    The best wb killer is to go for a ride.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You're making me miss my "horsey" days again, Barbara! Oh yes, there is definitely something restorative in the calming, repetitive motion of grooming a horse.

      Delete
    2. This is good information for my ranch books. Thank you, Barbara. Off to have my hero groom the horse.

      Delete
    3. Hi, Barbara, Nothing like getting 'hands on' to free up your mind, is there? And there's nothing like caring for animals to fill your soul right up.

      Delete
    4. Myra, Tina, and Erica you've given me a new outlook on barn chores!

      Delete
  20. Good morning Erica.

    I love all these suggestions.
    I think there's different reasons for writer's block so different answers. I've used so many of these.

    I have skipped ahead to a scene that I knew had to be in there. That doesn't make for pretty writing, but it kept me moving.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Connie! I don't think I've ever written a scene out of order...I'm such a lineal writer! But you're right, different causes call for different methods to fixing writer's block. Good thing there are a mess of them choose from!

      Delete
  21. Thanks for bringing these tips to us, Erica! I'd have to say I'm of the mindset of just write, anyway even if it's s-l-o-w.

    But before I do that, I pray and focus on emotions. That's a big one for me. I put on the skin of my characters and imagine what it is they're feeling.

    And if it's really bad, that means I have to go back and strengthen the conflict.

    Congrats on your newest release!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Josee! Conflict, emotion, and just writing! You've nailed it! :)

      Delete
  22. Great tips! Shared this with my teen writing college essays. :-) I love how these are from a variety of authors. Thanks so much, please put me in the drawing for your new book. I am a fan.
    Becky B.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Becky! I hope your teen finds these tips helpful! I homeschooled both my kids through graduation, and it's a hard job well worth it! Kudos to you!

      Delete
  23. As a reader, I'm super happy that writers put so much effort into learning their craft and ways to overcome the roadblocks that crop up from time to time.

    I've had Erica's book on my Christmas list so please include me in the A Child's Christmas Wish drawing. Thanks!

    Happy reading/writing Thursday everyone!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Tracey! Thanks for dropping in today! I hope you get a chance to read A Child's Christmas Wish!

      Delete
  24. Well, wasn't this post fun and different! I loved the topic but I loved the format even more. It was like an authors' panel at a writing conference, only better organized and with no failing microphones. :) Seriously, lots of good help from you all this morning, I loved hearing your different voices, and please enter me in the drawing. :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Dana! No failing microphones! LOL That is SO true! No squealing feedback either...at least, I don't think there is!

      Delete
    2. I agree, Dana! Perfect description.

      Delete
  25. Hi Erica - great suggestions for that pesky Writer's Block. I usually go back and read what I've already written, which can put me back on the right path with a little more direction. That or take a nap. A nap solves everything - right? And one more though unrelated to WB, I love your similes. You come up with the greatest "like a..." Thanks for celebrating with us in Seekerville today.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Cindy! Going back to re-read is a great tip. Sometimes I need the reminder of where I've been to sharpen my focus on where I need to go...and not just in writing fiction! :)

      Delete
  26. I love all the great suggestions and writerly advice, Erica! Thanks for bringing these wonderful writers along for the day.

    Truth be told, I've just come off a long stint of writer's block. Or in my case you could call it indecisiveness. After wrapping up editorial responsibilities on my next book coming out, and while in recovery mode after our daughter's family of six finally moved out of our house and across the ocean last July, I just could not get my head around what to work on next. (Being between contracts while waiting on a proposal decision hasn't helped matters!)

    But last week I said enough was enough. "Just write something," I told myself. So I pulled out a different kind of story I'd been playing with over the last year or two, and I'm diving in again. Feels good!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "Just write something" is EXCELLENT advice! I've languished between contracts before, and it's such an odd place to be, so strange-feeling. I'm glad you're diving in again! And a different kind of story from your norm is a great way to keep things fresh and interesting while you wait on that proposal!

      Delete
  27. Erica, great to see you here! Your post is packed full of great ideas when our creativity sags or even comes to a screeching halt. Thank you and all the terrific authors you brought with you today for sharing what works for them.

    I'm not sure you'd call it a block, but when I get stuck, I always go back and read what I've written so far. Somehow that either restores my confidence or I can see a problem I need to fix or the direction I need to go with the plot.

    I agree with Cheryl that writing is hard. Sometimes we're tired, scared, emotionally depleted and hard feels harder. For me those are the times to take a break.

    I have great memories of touring Conner's Prairie with you and some history loving Seekers. Soaking up history is a lovely way to fill our creative tanks.

    Janet

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Janet, I go back and read over stuff too, maybe a little line editing, that frequently gets me unstuck when I see where I've been.
      KB

      Delete
    2. Janet! I LOVED seeing Conner's Prairie with you and the Seekers! Going to see historic sites fills up my creative cup and sparks TONS of new ideas! :)

      Delete
    3. kaybee, nice to see that rereading what you've written helps you get back on track, too!

      Janet

      Delete
    4. Erica, I also remember that our hubbies were along. Fun to get to meet yours. He seems like a great guy!

      Janet

      Delete
  28. Hi Erica!

    Writer's block is a real thing, isn't it?

    My favorite way to handle it is to walk away from the computer. For a weekend. For an hour. Whatever it may be.

    But when I'm on a deadline, that time away can just ramp up the stress. That's when I use the most effective way of beating it - I go back and rework the plot.

    Most of the time when I hit a block, it's because of a weakness somewhere in my planning. If I rework the plot, or take a new look at the character's emotions and their journey (much like Peter's comment in point #3), I can feel the strength of the story again.

    And I use point #9 all the time - Cross stitch is my evening refueling time. I listen to an audio book and lose myself in the process of following someone else's story (the audio book) and someone else's creativity (the cross stitch design), all while experiencing the satisfaction of something concrete coming from my efforts.

    I'm looking forward to reading your new book!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey, Jan! Yep, when I hit a wall with my story, I have to go back and see where I let my characters off too easily, or where I dodged some strong emotion that led to a lessening of tension.

      And yay for cross-stitch. Wonder if we will ever finish these HUGE projects we're working on. :)

      Delete
    2. At my stitching pace, probably not in my lifetime! LOL!

      Delete
  29. Lot's of great stuff here! I talk it out. Usually I find that if I start talking out loud to someone, I fill in the holes of the narrative.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Do you talk to real or imaginary people? Just curious.

      Delete
    2. Tina's question is a valid one! Do you talk to the characters? Do they talk back??? :D

      Delete
    3. Yes. They talk to me when I try to sleep. I'm grateful for SIRI. I send the comments to her in the middle of the night.

      Delete
    4. Kinda depends on if anyone is around...It's a writer's life :)

      Delete
    5. So true, Sherri. For some reason, thinking aloud shakes things loose.

      Delete
  30. Erica and friends, thanks for your awesome blog! I put it right up there with Sandra's. Very thought-provoking.

    When I'm "stuck" with a blank WORD page, I will write down the last two sentences on a piece of notebook paper, leave my desk, and write longhand. I also talk to myself a lot. My other half has no clue what I write about, is not a reader, so no help there. I also stop and read the affirmations on my cork board, and pray. Sometimes talking it out with God releases any fear I have about putting words on the page.

    Happy 10th Birthday, Seekerville! You sure know how to show a girl a good time!

    Enter me!

    Blessings,

    Marcia

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Marcia, So often our writer's block comes down to fear, doesn't it? We have to let go of that fear, or write in spite of it!

      Delete
  31. Thank you, Erica and friends!

    Praying and doing something else for a while are my favorite tips.

    May God bless you and all of Seekerville!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Phyllis! Those are two excellent ways to beat writer's block!

      Happy Thursday! :)

      Delete
  32. Okay, while I love Cheryl's take, we all know that trials and tribulations can steamroll our emotions... So that can mess up our writing energy. Sickness, divorce, death, oh my stars life can derail us...

    ReplyDelete
  33. And then it becomes easier for some to put it off... Like climbing on that dagburn horse that threw youse!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Real life can intrude! As long as we recognize the difference between exceptions and excuses, we're good! :)

      Delete
    2. Feeling a little convicted here.

      :)

      Delete
  34. It helps me to walk away and do something else. There have been times when I'm sitting in church and an idea pops in my brain. I jot it down and then get back to taking my notes on the sermon. I have even been known to dream a solution. I suppose this happens because while I have set it aside, I have also been letting it sit and gel for awhile in my brain. But anyway this has worked for me.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oooo, the idea for my first published novel came while I was in church! :)

      I've never dreamed a solution to a writing problem before. I think that would be so cool!

      Delete
  35. Such great advice here! Awesome to hang out with such amazing writers!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. See, and we feel in awe to have YOU stop by, Peter!

      Delete
    2. Peter, thanks so much for answering my shout out for help! Your idea was unique and pithy and right on point!

      Delete
    3. LOL. Not really, we sit at the uncool table in the cafeteria..but we banded together and made ourselves an unstoppable force. UNCOOL UNITE!!

      Delete
    4. We all sit at the Orange Rhombus table! Woohoo! :) (see an earlier Seekerville post of mine for more info on the Orange Rhombus table. )

      Delete
  36. Writer's fear? Oh, that's good. (And maybe a little painful.) Thanks for the great tips.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey, Jackie, writer's fear is a thing...at least we have a great community of writers like Seekerville so we can all be 'skeert' together! :)

      Delete
  37. Erica, great post on ways to move forward! Like Cheryl, if I’m stuck, I’ll skip around in my story. I’ve found writing out of order is possible.

    For motivation, the sticky note taped to my desk says: The worst thing you write is better than the best thing you did not write.Does anyone know who said this? Tina? This thought gets me moving!

    My advice is to do some research. Yes, I can get lost in searching, but when I study something, my brain kicks in with more story ideas. Then I’m back to filling the page with interesting tidbits and events.

    Erica, thanks to you and all those offering their ideas. These tips will be valuable when I’m frozen again. Blessings!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sherida, I love that quote! I'm going to keep that one to help motivate me!

      Delete
  38. Erica, you've written a great post that's packed with wonderful advice! I've used a lot of the tips/techniques you've mentioned...getting away from the work, enjoying nature, reviewing the story's structure, brainstorming with a friend or relative...and they've all helped!

    My worst time was when I couldn't think of a new story idea. I was plot dry! It scared me. I was working on my Military Investigations series at the time and my military son was visiting. We talked about his work and the situations he'd experienced or had come in contact with. It didn't take long for me to come up with a plot that worked.

    Sometimes we need to mix and mingle and rub shoulders with other folks to trigger those ideas and plot points. Reading the newspaper can be good story fodder, as well. When I'm holed up in my office for too long, I start to lose my creative spark. Getting away from the computer and back into life helps me "what if" my way to a new story.

    So glad you could join us today! Congrats on your latest LI release! It looks wonderful!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey, Debbie, You are so right. Art imitates life, but if we don't have any life experiences, eventually we come to the end of ourselves. It's one reason I love visiting museums and talking to curators who always dish the inside info on history and the exhibits. They tell you the stories behind the artifacts, and that's where the gold is...in the stories!

      Delete
    2. Debby, I love the idea to mix and mingle with outside people! (I almost said REAL people.) LOL

      Delete
  39. Great tips! I like how you identified that writer's block can be writer's fear. With other projects in my life I'm a staller. I appreciate your encouragement!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey, Heidi! Thanks for chiming in! The first time I realized my writer's block was actually writer's fear, it was so freeing! Once we know what we're dealing with, we can face it and deal with it! :)

      Delete
    2. Heidi, I'm a staller, too. I think it's perfectionism.

      Delete
  40. Erica, if I get writers block, First I sulk, then I take a walk and come home and have some tea. Walking really clears my head, I take in the scents, birds chirping and all the floral landscapes. Next, I get a pad and pen, sit on the lanai (outdoors) and begin to write, “It’s a beautiful day, but I don’t know what to write”...the more I scribble that — the words inside me start to flow, I write better by hand and that usually gets me started. When I wrote for True Romance years ago, I could write the whole story by hand, then type it out and revise. So now I usually write on the computer unless the words won’t come. Thanks for great column on writers block.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. LOLOLOL. I love the sulk part. Transparency. My favorite word. Tell it like it is, Suzanne. That's coincidental, I write most of my Woman's World stories by hand too.

      Delete
    2. Oh yeah, there are a few sulking moments, a few kick the trash can instances...but I love that you get right back on it and do what works for you....I could never write by hand, mostly because my handwriting is atrocious! I would never be able to figure out what I said!

      Delete
    3. Suzanne, I love that you start by writing that sentence! I need to try that. I love writing by hand sometimes just to change my mindset. Starting with that sentence is almost like doodling. :)

      Delete
    4. I was big into journaling as a teen and keeping a five-year diary as a child. Guess that’s where writing by hand comes in. I write Chicken Soup for the soul stories by hand, Tina. And I just sold them my 16th.

      Delete
  41. Hi Erica! Love this post and it couldn't be better timed for me. I loved #4 and #5 and I'm soooo putting my little inner editor into an envelope. Can I step on her sometimes too? Giggle just kidding. Sorta. Not really.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Sharee! :) Feel free to pummel the little snot! :) After all, Michelle gave us permission to KILL our inner editor and get away free! :)

      Delete
    2. We could go so far as creating a voodoo doll. lol

      Delete
  42. HI Erica! Fun post! My inner editor requires larger than 3X5 card! I dug through my stash and found a ruled 5X8. Awesome! Wrote her a note, sealed the envelope. Now I'm good! :) There's something very proactive about taking a physical stand. Love this advice.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yay! Isn't it cathartic! :) I hope the note you wrote her was quite stern!

      Delete
  43. Loved this, such great ideas. Thank you, Erica and friends!

    ReplyDelete
  44. Replies
    1. :) Thanks for helping me out, Cheryl! *Blowing some pixie dust your way!*

      Delete
  45. Erica, I destroy writer's block with research about my setting or little known facts I can incorporate into the story or character psychology. It always sparks a new idea.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Barbara, that's excellent advice! I love going back to the research, to whatever initially sparked the idea for the story. That usually gives me a little boost.

      Delete
  46. Great post, Erica. Thanks to all the writers who added their tips. Killing my inner editor is one thing I most need to do. I also think quit stalling is the best advice for me. Right now I am finishing pretty much my last scene in my novel. I think the ending is about as hard as the beginning. It isn't coming together very well and I just keep putting words on paper and hopefully can make sense of them later.

    Please put me in the drawing for your book! I want to read it this Christmas season.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sandy, endings can be hard! There are a lot of things to wrap up, but you can do it!

      Delete
  47. Erica, as we approach the dinner hour across the map I want to thank you and your team for this great post and for spending the day with us. You made our birthday special. XX

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Tina, thank you so much for having me! It's always a blast!

      Delete
  48. HEY ERICA! Thank you for sharing! When I become overwhelmed, I take a break and redirect my focus. When I return, I have a clear mind.

    Blessings and((((HUGS)))))

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Caryl, excellent advice! Sometimes we just need to step back a bit, don't we?

      Delete
  49. Wow, Eric & friends, good stuff. Now let me share which of these ten tips don't work....

    [.....blank space.....]


    ReplyDelete
  50. This was such a great post! I loved all the different things shared her. Peter Leavell's quote: "Focus entirely on emotions, my own and the characters. Nothing about plot, only how I feel, and lay that on top of my character. " Never thought to do this before. I guess that means I really really need to know what my character is feeling.

    Also, recognizing writer's block as writer's fear? Yeah, lived that one. Gotta keep working anyway, right? Write scared.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Jeanne, write scared. Yup! It's hard, but it makes our characters more vulnerable and relate-able, doesn't it?

      Delete
  51. Erica, thank you for some great suggestions. For me, sitting down and actually writing helps a lot. Walking on a treadmill also helps me think about the next scene. I loved reading about what helps other writers.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Tanya, there's nothing better for writer's block but just getting on with it, is there? Write, write, write!

      Delete
  52. Hi Erica, I am so glad to see you here and i appreciate the great tips that you've shared for writers. I am only a reader but I think that we all, no matter our profession, go through times when creative seems to have dried up or our enthusiasm hits an all time low. That is when a change of scenery or a change in routine is often the key. And of course asking for help from The One who planned it all!
    Thanks for your post and giveaway.
    Blessings!
    Connie
    cps1950(at)gmail(dot)com

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Connie! I wish I could remember to pray for help before I exhausted myself! I should've put that tip up at #1. :)

      Delete
  53. One of the ways that I deal with my writers block, is to just put down my writing and read a book for inspiration and a way to resuscitate my turned-to-mush brain.

    But I've found that all these tips have helped to varying degrees.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey, Nicki, That's an excellent way to shoo away writer's block. We have to remember to refill the tank from time to time, don't we?

      Delete
  54. ERICA!!! I apologize for my tardiness, but just got back into town, so better late, right?

    EXCELLENT POST, my friend, with invaluable tips from some of my FAVORITE authors and friends (waving to MaryLu and Amanda, in particular).

    What impressed me about this post (besides the fact it's written so well), is how unique so many of the tips are, and things I've never heard before. For that, I thank you!

    I swear, I must need to read Peter Leavell because that guy is a hoot!! LOVE all of his statements, but especially:

    "Focus on the Emotions, yours and your characters."

    As an emotional CDQ (caffeinated drama queen), I am ashamed to say that I never, EVER thought of that, so kudos to Mr. Leavell!!

    You said: "I would love to hear from you on how YOU conquer this awful beast called Writer’s Block.

    I have one word for how I do it: treadmill.

    For some reason when I get on a treadmill, it starts my creative juices flowing, and I'm usually able to break through writer's block AND exercise while doing it! :)

    Hugs,
    Julie

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey, Julie! Peter Leavell is one super-cool dude, to be sure! And he LOVES History! :) Which gives him extra points on the way-cool chart!

      Treadmill...I loathe my treadmill so much that I would rather bust through writer's block than use it...so in a way, my treadmill does help me break the block. "Write, Erica, or you will have to use the treadmill!" and away I go, slapping out words.

      Delete
  55. Hi Erica!
    Writer's Block...hm...it's a brick wall for me, lol This is exactly why I am a reader :) And I'm eager to read your new book. Thank you for the chance!

    ReplyDelete
  56. Wow Erica, Looks like you had a busy and wonderful day today. I'm sorry I'm late, but we were traveling on the road today. whew!!. I really want to thank you for your post. Writers bloc does hit every once in a while doesn't it? Great hints on overcoming. Thanks so much for joining us today and helping us celebrate our birthday. Many blessings.

    ReplyDelete
  57. Loved your post, Erica - and learning how each author deals with writer's block. My thanks to you and each of the other authors included in the post!!

    ReplyDelete