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- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sdd.hp.com!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!news.cso.uiuc.edu!maureen.cen.uiuc.edu!user
- From: mtan@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu (Maureen Tan)
- Subject: Re: HELP!!! Writer's Block!!!
- References: <1992Jul30.091835.1@lure.latrobe.edu.au>
- Message-ID: <mtan-310792090946@maureen.cen.uiuc.edu>
- Sender: usenet@news.cso.uiuc.edu (Net Noise owner)
- Followup-To: misc.writing
- Organization: UIUC
- Date: Fri, 31 Jul 1992 14:25:41 GMT
- Lines: 48
-
- In article <1992Jul30.091835.1@lure.latrobe.edu.au>,
- miuvdd@lure.latrobe.edu.au wrote:
- >
- > Help!!!!
- >
- > I'm in a slump! I'm in a rut! I have the dreaded writers block, and
- > nothing I do seems to do any good!
- >
- > So if anyone out there has any ideas how I might overcome this evil
- > foe, I would much appreciate it!
-
- First you gather your materials: chicken wire, lots of newspaper, a gallon
- of homemade glue. Then you begin to build a large paper mache dragon...
-
- Seriously, sometime just walking away (mentally or physically)
- from the material for a little while can be helpful. The trick is to
- set a time limit on how long you'll allow yourself to walk away.
-
- I've found that it sometimes helps to look at the circumstances
- surrounding the "block." A little like diagnosing the disease before
- treatment...
-
- Are you in the middle of something--is there a
- flaw in the plot your subconscious is telling you about? Have you
- lost respect for a key character. (I once went into acute block after
- writing
- a chapter that was really dramatic...except that the old guy
- in the wheelchair got up, crossed the garden, and shook hands with
- the heroine.)
-
- Are you at the beginning --this seems to be the time when bullying
- through works. In other words, just sit down and put any damn thing
- on paper just to get the muscles warmed up and overcome the basic
- "Oh, God, I can't go through this again" instinct.
-
- Are you at that horrible spot near the end where finishing dredges up
- all the insecurities about "will it be good enough?" Gail Goodwin wrote
- a neat piece called The Watcher at the Gates. It's this little guy who
- sits on your subconscious and trys to stop the flow of your imagination.
- At the end of the article, Goodwin asks her Watcher
- "What is it you're so afraid I'll do?" And he repies, "Fail."
-
- Or is there something else going on in your life that's creating enough
- trauma that it's sapping your creative energy? And can you shoot it/
- quit it/pay it/threaten it or bury it so that you can get on with what's
- important in life?
-
- Maureen (a.k.a. Jane)
-