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Lily
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May 14, 2014 12:18PM

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When you're stuck, open a blank text file (or old-schoolers can grab a blank sheet of paper), set a timer for 15 minutes, and start writing. The rules are DO NOT STOP WRITING, even if it's innane crap. Eventually, the part of your brain that hasn't frozen up kicks in gives you something to work with. Works every time.
It looks like this:
I don't know why I'm stuck, why can't I think of anything to write? I usually can think of stuff, but now I can't, all I can think about it mud. What's up with that? MUD?! Hmm, that's an acronym for something, isn't it? But I can't think of what it stands for. So now I can't write AND I can't think. Bummer.
Jerad bit into the peanut butter and jelly sandwich, without expectation, and his lack of enthusiasm was rewarded with the lackluster flavor he was anticipating not enjoying. He was pretty sure his Dad used the same ingredients his mother did (after all, how many ingredients ARE there in a p-b-and-j)? In fairness to his dad, nothing tasted quite the same since Jerad's mother died. First there was the shock of the accident itself. He thought he would never get over that odd "missing" feeling he had. The day finally came, though at one time he swore it never would, where he finally gave up that small hope in his mind that she might somehow return, even while he knew it wasn't possible. She was dead. And after he came to face that fact, life had gotten back to normal. Mostly. But still, nothing tasted good anymore.
That was less than 15 minutes, but it looks like I have a nugget of something if I wanted to work with it. It's riddled with errors, and I see I have some clumsy phrases, but the goal is to throw a mis-shaped lump of text onto the page that I can later edit.



Prompt of the week: a cop must decide to convict a pink flamingo and risk the species' extinction.
No one is under obligation, this is all for fun, if it gets you to kick the blocking habit, go for it!


When I first started writing I'd put about 1000 words into a project then lose confidence and stop. Then a month later I'd do the same with a new project.
I decided I had to get into adding to it every day even if it was hard, so for the first week I wrote 100 words a day, the next week 200 a day and so on. I got up too thousands a day.
I took a break while I was studying and now I'm doing the same again but going up 100 a day. :-)

What I usually do is just wait until the next day, exercise or just go to work, keeping paper by me for when I get inspiration (more ideas than anything else) and incorporate that into my work.


right now i'm suffering from a severe case of writer's block. outline done. notes compiled. yet in front of the monitor, can't type a lick. though i know the story needs to get done. CAN. NOT. TYPE. it's driving me nuts. i berate myself - i should be writing! - but i can't come up with anything. so i work on something else, something else, and more something else until i get back to it and it's the same cycle >_<

When I need a prompt I go back to old episodes of the 'Writing Excuses' podcast. They're good for ones that are vague enough to not be useless for your genre but interesting enough to get you going.
K.p. wrote: "though i know the story needs to get done. CAN. NOT. TYPE. it's driving me nuts. i berate myself - i should be writing! - but i can't come up with anything. so i work on something else, something else, and more something else until i get back to it and it's the same cycle >_<"
I knew of someone who used to have a rule that if they didn't want to add to their manuscript they had to write a whole page about why they didn't want to.
It's all about finding something that works for you.


I take a long time to finish books. Partly this is because I like to do a lot of research, but I also seem to get in my own way a lot. There's something that keeps me from sitting down and going on writing marathons the way I would like to. It's terribly frustrating, because I usually have the whole thing planned out already! I know what the whole plot is. Of course, getting that on to the page is something different.

That's what I do too! I normally write two or three alongside each other and thankfully I'm able to avoid the dreaded writer's block most of the time!

They ripped apart the main characters personality, including the parts that were bleedthrough from me. :-(


It's why I don't show unfinished work to anyone unless they know the full extent of what I am trying to do, while also knowing that they're criticism is constructive.
I say keep with what you have and don't go back to fix it until you're done.

Have you had anyone else read? I can't say ignore them, but get other opinions. From readers. Have a few people beta. I had a few family members read my first book. They told me they didn't like the accents I wrote into the dialog. I ignored them, but when I got comments from my beta readers, I heard much the same. I felt like crap for a while, but it in the end, I think the revisions made it a better book.
On the other hand, you might be surprised that some readers might like the character's personality. They might see things with a different eye than other authors.
Whatever you decide, good luck.

Anne wrote: "I have about three or four books going at a time. If I'm not 'feeling' one, then I work on another. Other times I'll do a re-read and edit. I find that music also helps."
I do all of that, both having 3-4 projects at once, music going (MJ is my homeboy when i edit. hee-hee!) and tonnes of research. I'm not sure what's causing the block. I'm not burned out. I switch projects if i'm not feeling it and do a bit of work on it. I switch music if I need a different atmosphere depending on the book (one novel I'm working on i listen to bubblegum pop while another needs disco). I even tried random exercises (my favorite is to flip through a magazine, find a random picture and make up a story based on the scene.)
I'll just keep plugging away, i guess.



it can get challenging. but it's fun! i wrote a story *loosely based* in sengoku era japan. lots of research but i'm sure reader will give you some leeway as long as the story is interesting

If it's really getting in the way you could probably get as much of the prose and the plot down as you can before you start researching and filling in the details.

