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- Underground eXperts United
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- [ Writer's Block ] [ By The GNN ]
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- WRITER'S BLOCK
- by THE GNN/DualCrew-Shining/uXu
-
- or... 'a generally quite boring conceptual analysis of a luXurious
- problem strictly limited to the interest of a few.'
-
- People who write on a regular basis now and then experience a problem that,
- despite its temporary character, is highly annoying. Roughly speaking, this
- is the inability to write. One day, when the writer sits in front of the
- word processor, typewriter or pen to nail the latest thoughts down, nothing
- happens. If the writer is experienced, he or she will understand that this
- has nothing to do with her ability, but is merely a psychological block.
- This insight, however, is not very helpful. A writer wants to write. If she
- cannot do what she wants, she will despair. It is therefore not surprising
- to find historical examples of writers who has been abusers of various
- stimulants, desperately trying to overcome the periods of writer's block.
- Writing requires two main things: inspiration and experience.
- Inspiration is needed for the ideas, experience for getting the ideas down
- on paper in an acceptable manner. A regular writer seldom needs any more
- than one single (and often quite simple) idea to be able to write a short
- story or novel. The rest - characters, places, history, disposition - comes
- automatically, thanks to the experience. Someone who is inexperienced must
- weigh every sentence, every person and place, during the writing process. I
- believe the reason for this is the fact that what separates regular writers
- from the rest is the ability to build a whole world inside one's mind.
- This world is then transported through the hands down on paper.
- Inexperienced writers cannot perfectly build this world in their minds, and
- must therefore check every word to see if it is in correspondence with the
- world they are trying to build.
- When the writer is not in a state of block, the process of writing is
- simple. She gets an idea, and types it down. That is all, actually. In
- fact, the fictional world is constructed in her mind the very second she
- gets the idea. She just has to sit down and let her hands do the work. When
- a writer claims that she does not know what constitutes the writing
- process, this only means that she works without knowing that she knows what
- constitutes the writing process.
- Then one day the writer will notice that the writing process is not all
- that easy anymore. She has to actually think of how to write. This is the
- first stage of the block. When she gets an idea, she cannot just sit down
- and type. She has to actively create the world she is about to deal with.
- It does not build itself anymore. The tempo slows down. If the writer was
- able to fill ten pages every day, she will now notice that she is unable to
- fill more than five. The ideas are still there, and she wants to be able to
- write ten, but it is just impossible. And she does not really know why.
- Time will pass, and the amount of written material will decline. The
- writer will despair as she suddenly is unable to write a single sentence.
- Still, she's got all the fine ideas, but they will just not write
- themselves anymore. The final stage of the block is when the ideas leave
- her. No ideas, no writing, nothing. She just sits by the wordprocessor,
- typewriter or pen and wait. And this she must do. A fully developed block
- cannot be forced away. After a while, the ideas come back, but not the
- writing. When some more time has passed, the writing comes back, slowly at
- first, then back to a normal pace again. The block has passed. Until next
- time.
- How long does a block last? It depends on the person. Personally, I have
- discovered that mine comes once a year, and it lasts for about one to two
- months. I really hate this period, as I always believe that I will not be
- able to write again. Other writers I have discussed this matter with say
- the same thing. I no longer believe that I will not be able to write again
- when I am in a state of block; but I am tormented by the ideas that pop
- into my mind. They are good, and I love them, but I cannot write them down.
- I just have to accept that they will never be written. It is no use to take
- notes for the future, because the ideas must be written down the very
- moment they appear, otherwise they lose their substance.
- The moment I feel that my block is on its way to pass, I rush to the
- computer and type, type, type. The more I type, the better I feel. I would
- not claim that I actually WRITE anything, I just type. This file was not
- written, it was typed for pure therapeutic reasons - something the quality
- and content probably reveal.
-
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- uXu #411 Underground eXperts United 1998 uXu #411
- ftp://ftp.lysator.liu.se/pub/texts/uxu
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