
A Goodreads user
asked
Riley Lashea:
Hello! I was wondering--how did you get into writing, and what advise do you have for those of us who are struggling to write? I am an author myself, but I seem to have major writer's block. What do you do to get through something like that? Thank you for your time. Have a great day! :D
Riley Lashea
Hi, K.
Thanks for being my first question :)
To be quite honest, I’ve been doing it for so long, I can’t remember what got me into writing exactly. I remember writing short stories and poems and working on plays and a school magazine in elementary school, and I’ve been scratching into notebooks on my own for as long as I can remember.
As for writer’s block, I don’t suffer from it often, but I definitely suffer it when it happens. I think a lot of people don’t realize how cerebral writing really is, how much brain power it takes. I really think your brain can just get tapped out. I don’t know about you, but at the end of a long day of writing I often have a raging headache I’m convinced comes from thinking too hard for too long.
I get over writer’s block by doing the same things I do in an effort to prevent it from happening in the first place. I like puzzles, so I do crosswords or Sudoku or KenKen when I get a little burned out. Sometimes I play guitar or work in Photoshop. When I know I need to put in some long writing days (when I’m coming up on a release date or deadline), I generally stop every two to three hours and play ten minutes or so of a video game. Mrs. Pacman, Mario Kart and Legend of Zelda are my faves. I find things that force my mind to work differently are the most effective remedies for getting back in the zone.
I also avoid social networks like the plague when writing, because I’m easily bothered by depressing news and I never know what I might see. I guess that’s my only real advice. If it’s possible for you, get up and write before you do anything else. Try to avoid news and other people’s drama as much as possible. Get to your story first. Catch up with real life later.
Thanks for being my first question :)
To be quite honest, I’ve been doing it for so long, I can’t remember what got me into writing exactly. I remember writing short stories and poems and working on plays and a school magazine in elementary school, and I’ve been scratching into notebooks on my own for as long as I can remember.
As for writer’s block, I don’t suffer from it often, but I definitely suffer it when it happens. I think a lot of people don’t realize how cerebral writing really is, how much brain power it takes. I really think your brain can just get tapped out. I don’t know about you, but at the end of a long day of writing I often have a raging headache I’m convinced comes from thinking too hard for too long.
I get over writer’s block by doing the same things I do in an effort to prevent it from happening in the first place. I like puzzles, so I do crosswords or Sudoku or KenKen when I get a little burned out. Sometimes I play guitar or work in Photoshop. When I know I need to put in some long writing days (when I’m coming up on a release date or deadline), I generally stop every two to three hours and play ten minutes or so of a video game. Mrs. Pacman, Mario Kart and Legend of Zelda are my faves. I find things that force my mind to work differently are the most effective remedies for getting back in the zone.
I also avoid social networks like the plague when writing, because I’m easily bothered by depressing news and I never know what I might see. I guess that’s my only real advice. If it’s possible for you, get up and write before you do anything else. Try to avoid news and other people’s drama as much as possible. Get to your story first. Catch up with real life later.
More Answered Questions
Kristen Jamison
asked
Riley Lashea:
This question contains spoilers…
(view spoiler)[
Almost finished with The Innocents. Seriously, though? "and, when Haydn looked to her again, Delaney surrendered to the surrender." Surrendered to the surrender? That is so beautiful! Because that's what it is, isn't it? A total giving in (but not giving up, if that makes any sense) of everything - mind, body and soul - to someone she absolutely shouldn't want to give anything to.
(hide spoiler)]
Caramel
asked
Riley Lashea:
Hi, Just finished "Behind the Green Curtain ", so to tell I really loved the way you write, I taught I was there in the corner watching every scene, not reading it, I would have loved it if there a sentence to laugh at from time to time? to break the tension, but all in all I really really loved it. your writing is just amazing. keep it up though.
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