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What to do when you lose inspiration
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Joel
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Jun 17, 2017 11:31PM

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Another idea is to try some brainstorming and then see if you can organize your ideas into a sequence that will help you keep your plot. Maybe all you need is a few markers to get you back on track when you find yourself getting stuck.
I have learned that even a little planning can go a long way towards keeping the words flowing and keeping my sanity.
Good luck, and keep writing!
I write notes to keep that idea in place (highlight them) and continue to the next scene. Eventually I go back to the notes. I had to write a scene where my MC goes on a date and I didn't know what to write exactly. All I knew was that the date will be a bit awkward. Was the last note in my novella. I remembered that I wrote an assingnment for one of my Creative Writing class (couldn't remember which class - all I remembered was that it was for grade and it should be a file buried somewhere in my computer). I found it, rewrote it and decided to write a prompt every day as it could be a lifesaver.

Generally, I write out the scenes that are clearest in my head, first, then as I'm rewriting and editing, I will smooth things over, adding in extra scenes or expanding ones that end too abruptly.

As Dwayne said, when you rewrite/edit you can add, subtract and smooth things over. The main thing is to get it down to a logical (or illogical) ending. What I start with is never what I end up with.
If you are having problems with plotting, take a course on what all you need and it will help to focus your ideas into a full story.
Also, a first draft seldom is good. For most of us, it requires a lot of changes to make it readable. As my mentor told me, start at the beginning and keep going until you reach the end. Don't worry about it being good or bad, just get it down.


Without an objective (either to get something or get away from something), you grind to a halt. And if there aren't any obstacles, it'll be boring and nothing to invent additional scenes from.
Good luck!



Ideas, I’m afraid, are easy. And because they’re plot related, in the form, “This happens…then that happens…and then…” the result tends to read dispassionately, which kills immediacy and may cause you to lose interest in your own story.
The trick is to place your protagonist into the situation as-a-person, reacting to the situation in the moment they call now, not as an overview of events told by a voice whose emotion we can't hear (have the computer read it aloud to get what a reader "hears." Then, knowing what your protagonist believes, and plans—and misunderstanding as the protagonist may—the reader will live the scene vicariously instead of just learning the details. So instead of telling a story, you’re showing the character’s adventure from the inside. It's the difference between hearing about the vacation and living it.
In other words, for a scary story we don’t tell the reader that the protagonist is frightened, we terrorize that reader, and make them afraid to turn out the lights—an emotional rather than a factual experience. And that makes the reading, and the writing, more fun.
Our job is to toss things at the protagonist (and reader) that will make them want to do what the plot calls for. It’s not a methodology we learn in school, where they’re training us to write for our future employers (that’s why we wrote so many essays and reports and so few stories) but it’s worth a few trips to the fiction writing section of the local library system to pick up some tricks to turn your writing from outside-in, which is inherently dispassionate, to inside-out.
Hope this helps.

Each scene is essentially a text file that can be moved around as you like. So if you've got set scenes you know you want to include, but don't have linking scenes yet fleshed out, go ahead and write the ones you know. You can back fill and swap things around just by click/dragging in the browser window.
As you're writing, when you want to create a new scene: Ctrl-K and a new scene is created automatically, renamed and all you have to do is keep typing. Later you can chose to include/exclude scenes as you like.
I've currently got at least 4 projects going at once in Scrivener. I've mainly been focusing on 2. When I run into a slump on one, I'm able to just pop up one of the others and get rolling again on a "new" project.
And when projects are in down time, I tend to day dream about them a lot, imagining plot twists, "what if" scenarios, etc. After I think about them for a while I am usually able to get back into them and be productive again.
And finally, if you're not outlining, which I find clunky and rather oppressive (I'm not going to follow YOUR order, Mister Outline!), I find it almost essential that I understand where the story is going to end in at least a general sense, or else the project will slowly suffocate. So while your ideas gestate in the back of your mind, try to focus on what the ultimate resolution of the story should be. What's the final truth going to be? Who's the man behind everything? I've gone so far as to write "What's Really Going On" documents to keep the internal logic of my plots straight.
P.S. And read! Someone else suggested this. I find it helps tremendously not just in getting a feel for how to handle language, but also in writing style: how to organize scenes, how and when flashbacks work, how proper pacing of a plot helps propel the story in an appealing way. When in doubt, read.


Jay wrote: " It’s not a methodology we learn in school... but it’s worth a few trips to the fiction writing section of the local library"
Actually, I learned a lot about creative writing in school. We wrote stories as far back as third grade and I even took a creative writing class in my senior year. I also took creative writing workshops in college. I took a number of literature courses all through junior high, high school, and college. Getting familiar with classic and great works of literature, discussing how they're written, etc. can definitely help improve one's writing.
Books on writing from the library can be helpful. Some are quite good.
It's also good to continue to read. Lots. Not only in the genre(s) you write, but in all genres. Study the books you read and see how various authors handle setting a scene, dialogue, character descriptions, etc.
Actually, I learned a lot about creative writing in school. We wrote stories as far back as third grade and I even took a creative writing class in my senior year. I also took creative writing workshops in college. I took a number of literature courses all through junior high, high school, and college. Getting familiar with classic and great works of literature, discussing how they're written, etc. can definitely help improve one's writing.
Books on writing from the library can be helpful. Some are quite good.
It's also good to continue to read. Lots. Not only in the genre(s) you write, but in all genres. Study the books you read and see how various authors handle setting a scene, dialogue, character descriptions, etc.




Estoy de acuerdo con Nia, hacer un esquema sobre la trama te simplificará el trabajo. Marca en ese esquema tus ideas, las que pienses que son las mejores y deshecha las que no creas tan buenas. Escribe unos quince minutos al día y cuando te quedes en blanco, sal, date una vuelta, tómate un café, verás que la inspiración regresa. A mí me funcionó en mi primera novela.

I'm a lot like Justin. I hold off until I feel it deep in my bones. But at the same time, I'm spending ample time allowing the story to come to me.
I'll lay in bed longer at night before falling asleep, thinking about it as what would happen if it were to go this way or that. I take longer showers as that's where my mind is always the most creative. And finally, I listen to music in my car, driving for hours if I need to. I know it's silly, but I actually find music that I believe fits the heart of my characters and what they want and just feel a song from their perspective.

I do this too! Especially for POV characters. I'll make character specific playlists, and any time I feel like I might need a little jolt while writing, I'll play them. Works every time.

"He runs. He sees a wall. He jumps over it. He runs out in the street. He gets hit by a car."
Now, instead of worrying about writing a brand new story or how chapters will transition from one to the other, I just have to worry about editing a bad chapter.
I'm sure it doesn't work for everyone, but it's a nice way for me to trick myself into stopping my procrastination and actually writing something.

I like this approach and have used it myself. Some chapters have dialogue broken up with: She did something cool.

Have you tried outlining or jotting down your ideas instead of just full blown writing the novellas at once? That might help you get your ideas together and see the full picture.
If you..."
I like giving a time frame to see what you can come up with. It makes it feel less looming and overwhelming.

I do this too! Especially f..."
Yesssss! Playlists. Me too, LOL.


S.J. - I love this idea. Thank you. ...
Another approach that helps me is to get out of my own head and listen to what's in others' heads. An efficient way for me to to this is to attend a local writers' group meeting or a spoken word event, where I get to hear how other people express their creativity.



Been doing this for years. It works for me.

I use text to speech. When my words stop speaking to me, I literally have them speak to me. I have the last chapter read aloud and it always gets me back into the middle of what I was doing.

I set things aside for a couple of days (if you knew me, you would know how hard that is for me) and then just plowed back into my writing. After a few days of determined forcefulness, I found that it was becoming easier again, and now, my production is back up to where it was.
Just write. It may not be great, but that can be corrected in editing.
Carlton wrote: "Music. Preferably classical. And soundtracks of movies you've not yet watched..."
Works for me, too, but I prefer a blend of rock, blues, jazz, country, rap, a little classical...
Works for me, too, but I prefer a blend of rock, blues, jazz, country, rap, a little classical...
M. Ray Holloway Jr. wrote: "Just write. It may not be great, but that can be corrected in editing. "
Sometimes that's the funnest part, watching a smelly pile of garbage become more and more a work of art with each pass.
Sometimes that's the funnest part, watching a smelly pile of garbage become more and more a work of art with each pass.

Sometimes that's the funnest part, watching a smelly pile of garbage become more and more a wor..."
I agree! And for future reference and help you write despite anything, keep a few of those passes and reread them when you lose inspiration. It will encourage you to write no matter what, because you'll know how well it will clean up later. :)
G.G. wrote: "I agree! And for future reference and help you write despite anything, keep a few of those passes and reread them ..."
Yeah, and it can be pretty amusing to go back and read the first draft later on and see just how different the book has become.
Yeah, and it can be pretty amusing to go back and read the first draft later on and see just how different the book has become.
Jane wrote: "I am given to believe that Papa Hemingway used to get roaring drunk"
Yes. Yes, he did. And he punched out marlins and rode mad bulls through Cuba and shot lions in the streets of Spain and all kinds of manly man stuff.
Yes. Yes, he did. And he punched out marlins and rode mad bulls through Cuba and shot lions in the streets of Spain and all kinds of manly man stuff.

Yes. Yes, he did. And he punched out marlins and rode mad bulls through Cuba and shot lions in the streets of Spai..."
I think I'll stick with the booze

I agree with an earlier comment that it doesn't sound like you're lacking inspiration, but need to reign yourself in a little (I think they used the word discipline). Have a good plan, then sit and follow it, letting the story unfold. I've been quoting Tom Clancy a lot lately, because I think this simple statement really captures it: "Just write the damn story." Hahaha!!! Hope all this is helpful.