The 10 Types of Writers Block (and How to Overcome Them)
BY CHARLIE JANE ANDERS OCT 6, 2011 10:16 AM
via io9.com: < http://io9.com/5844988/the-10-types-of-writers-block-and-how-to-overcome-them >
Writer's Block. It sounds like a fearsome
condition, a creative blockage. The end of invention. But what is it, really?
Part of why Writer's Block sounds so dreadful and
insurmountable is the fact that nobody ever takes it apart. People lump several
different types of creative problems into one broad category. In fact, there's
no such thing as "Writer's Block," and treating a broad range of creative
slowdowns as a single ailment just creates something monolithic and huge. Each
type of creative slowdown has a different cause and thus, a different
solution.
Instead of feeling overwhelmed by the terrifying
mystique of Writer's Block, it's better to take it apart and understand it and
then conquer it. Here are 10 types of Writer's Block and how to overcome each
type.
1. You can't come up with an idea.
This is the kind where you literally have a blank page
and you keep typing and erasing, or just staring at the screen until Angry Birds
calls to you. You literally can't even get started because you have no clue what
to write about, or what story you want to tell. You're stopped before you even
start.
There are two pieces of good news for anyone in this
situation: 1) Ideas are dime a dozen, and it's not that hard to get the idea
pump primed. Execution is harder of which more in a minute. 2) This is the
kind of creative stoppage where all of the typical "do a writing exercise"-type
stuff actually works. Do a ton of exercises, in fact. Try imagining what it
would be like if a major incident in your life had turned out way differently.
Try writing some fanfic, just to use existing characters as "training wheels."
Try writing a scene where someone dies and someone else falls in love, even if
it doesn't turn into a story. Think of something or someone that angers you, and
write a totally mean satire or character assassination. (You'll revise it later,
so don't worry about writing something libelous at this stage.) Etc. etc. This
is the easiest problem to solve.
2. You have a ton of ideas but can't commit to
any of them, and they all peter out.
Now this is slightly harder. Even this problem can
take a few different forms there's the ideas that you lose interest in after a
few paragraphs, and then there's the idea that you thought was a novel, but it's
actually a short story. The thing is, ideas are dime a dozen but ideas
that get your creative juices flowing are a lot rarer. Oftentimes, the coolest
or most interesting ideas are the ones that peter out fastest, and the dumbest
ideas are the ones that just get your motor revving like crazy. It's annoying,
but what can you do?
My own experience is that usually, you end up having
to throw all those ideas out. If they're not getting any traction, they're not
getting any traction. Save them in a file, come back to them a year or ten
later, and maybe you'll suddenly know how to tackle them. You'll have more
experience and a different mindset then. It's possible someone with more
stubbornness could make one of those idea work right away, but probably not
the reason you can't get anywhere with any of them is because they're just not
letting you tell the story you really want to tell, down in the murky
subconscious.
The good news? Usually when I'm faced with the "too
many ideas, none of them works" problem, I'm a few days away from coming up with
the idea that does work, like gangbusters. Your mind is working in overdrive,
and it's close to hitting the jackpot.
3. You have an outline but you can't get
through this one part of it.
Some writers work really well with an outline, some
don't. For some writers, the point of having an outline is to have a road to
drive off, a straight line to deviate from as far as possible. Plus, every
project is different even if you're an outline fan usually, there's always the
possibility that you need to grope in the dark for this one particular story.
Actually, there are two different reasons you could be
getting stuck:
1) Your outline has a major flaw and you just won't
admit it. You can't get from A to C, because B makes no sense. The characters
won't do the things that B requires them to do, without breaking character. Or
the logic of the story just won't work with B. If this is the case, you already
know it, and it's just a matter of attacking your outline with a hacksaw.
2) Your outline is basically fine, but there's a part
that you can't get past. Because it's boring, or because you just can't quite
see how to get from one narrative peak to the next. You have two cool moments,
and you can't figure out how to get from one cool bit to the other.
In either case, there's nothing wrong with taking a
slight detour, or going off on a tangent, and seeing what happens. Maybe you'll
find a cooler transition between those two moments, maybe you'll figure out
where your story really needs to go next. And most likely, there's something
that needs to happen with your characters at this point in the story, and you
haven't hit on it yet.
4. You're stuck in the middle and have no idea
what happens next.
Sort of the opposite of problem #3. Either you don't
have an outline, or you ditched it a while back. Actually, here's what seems to
happen a lot - you were on a roll the day before, and you wrote a whole lot of
promising developments and clever bits of business. And then you open your Word
document today, and... you have no idea where this is going. You thought you
left things in a great place to pick up the ball and keep running, and now you
can't even see the next step.
If it's true that you were on a roll, and now you're
stuck, then chances are you just need to pause and rethink, and maybe go back
over what you already wrote. You may just need a couple days to recharge. Or you
may need to rethink what you already wrote.
If you've been stuck in the middle for a while,
though, then you probably need to do something to get the story moving again.
Introduce a new complication, throw the dice, or twist the knife. Mark Twain
spent months stuck in the middle of Huckleberry Finn before he came up with the
notion of having Huck and Jim take the wrong turn on the river and get lost. If
you're stuck for a while, it may be time to drop a safe on someone.
5. You have a terrible feeling your story took
a wrong turn a hundred pages back, and you only just hit a dead end.
This is the worst. You made a decision that felt bold
and clever - you threw the dice and dropped a safe on someone - and now you're
realizing that you made a horrible mistake and you've gone off course. Worse,
you can see where your story should be right about now, if you hadn't made that
dreadful error.
If you're absolutely sure that you've gone the wrong
way, then there's no point in going forward any further. Is there any
alternative to rewinding all the way to the original mistake and starting from
there? Yes, but it might suck. Sometimes, if you can see clearly what your story
ought to be like at this juncture, you can just keep going from here, as if you
had gone the right way in the first place. Thus leaving yourself a giant hole
that you'll have to go back and plug later. You can also rewind partially, going
back 50 pages instead of 100 and then pretending you made the right choice
originally.
In either case, though, beware - you're going to end
up with two alternate timelines in your story, and it's up to you to keep
straight what happened in the timeline you're sticking with, as opposed to the
one you're discarding.
6. You're bored with all these characters,
they won't do anything.
You created these bold, vibrant characters, and now
you've written dozens of pages... about them brushing their teeth and feeding
their cats.
Let's start with the obvious: characters who don't do
anything aren't interesting characters. Either what you've got here are just
your supporting cast, and you haven't created your main character yet, or you
haven't found the thing that your characters really want, or the conflict that
will spur them into action. You have some characters, but not a story, not yet.
Sometimes you have to find the knife before you can
twist the knife.
The good news is, sometimes writing a few dozen pages
of nothing much happening can be super valuable - you're getting into the world,
and you're working out for yourself what these characters are about. It's
entirely possible that once you've done that, a conflict will present itself, or
one minor character will suddenly start looking like your protagonist. Just be
prepared to toss out all these pages after that happens. (As you probably will
with almost everything in a first draft, anyway.)
7. You keep imagining all the reasons people
are going to say your story sucks, and it paralyzes you.
Otherwise known as the Inner Critic - you can't make
any choices, because you keep imagining how someone will tear you apart for it
later. Actually, the person who will destroy you with their comments doesn't
exist, and it's just your own internal critic talking here. You'll need that
inner voice of scorn for later, when you're revising - but while you're working
on a first draft, you have to drown it out, possibly with loud Finnish death
metal.
Chances are the ideas you're putting down aren't
nearly as bad as your darkest fears tell you they might be. But in any case, you
can always fix it in rewrites. (Although this does mean that you'll have to be
twice as harsh when it comes to revising the thing - that's the bargain you make
when you write a quick first draft with an eye to revising later.)
8. You can't think of the right words for what
you're trying to convey in this one paragraph.
I've had this one - I know what I'm doing, and where
I'm going next, and the story is humming along. But I can't move forward until I
find just the right verb in this one sentence, and I spend a whole day's writing
time staring at the screen and trying to figure it out. This seems like a silly
waste of time - just use the wrong verb for now, fix it in rewrites! - except
that sometimes hitting on the right word is partly a matter of visualizing the
scene in your head. Plus, what if this happens during rewrites?
There's nothing wrong with spending a day or two
fussing over one sentence. It may seem like a waste of time, it may feel like
you're stuck - but actually, you're just paying close attention to your writing
and to the way you're depicting the scene. If this goes on for a week, though,
just pick a verb and move on.
9. You had this incredibly cool story in your
head, and now you're turning it into words on a screen and it's suddenly dumb.
Is this your inner critic talking? Are you sure? Are
you really sure?
Okay then. It's possible you're actually seeing a real
problem with your idea, and with the execution. And, you know, there's nothing
wrong with abandoning a novel and starting afresh. Sometimes these dead
half-finished novels serve as great fertilizer for the awesome novel you're
going to end up writing.
But don't give up too fast. It's possible that part of
your idea is salvageable, or that the idea is genuinely cool and you've gotten
yourself stuck into a weak execution of it. Sometimes it's helpful to step back
and write a synopsis of the stuff you've already written, so you can see how it
fits together and whether there are some buried parts that should be turning
points in the story. Sometimes it's helpful to try writing bits of your story
from a different character's point of view, to see how they look from another
vantagepoint.
10. You're revising your work, and you can't
see your way past all those blocks of text you already wrote.
Revising is a nightmare - and if you've adhered to the
"write a first draft quickly and then fix it in rewrites" school of thought,
you've agreed to a Faustian bargain. There's no way to make this process go
faster or more smoothly, a lot of the time. Sometimes it takes a while of
looking at your text from different angles to figure out where the problems are,
and sometimes you need more feedback from more people to figure out where the
real structural weaknesses are.
I'm going to go out on a limb and say that if you're
getting stuck during revisions, that's not any type of Writer's Block (as
nebulous a concept as Writer's Block is), but rather just the natural process of
trying to diagnose what ails your novel.
Although one thing that works for me when I'm getting
stuck with revisions is just to rewrite large sections from scratch, without
looking back at your original draft. Same story, new words. Sometimes, it's a
lot quicker than trying to wrangle the words you already put down.