The hardest part of any activity is getting started. In writing, there are different creative natures which will become the friends that will allow you to start your writing journey. Where better to start than by learning techniques to overcome a fear of starting?
Even if you have already begun and now face a different stumbling block in the course of your work, getting to know your creative personas will save you. They have a purpose at every stage of the writing process and will help the words come more easily. You will find that you are no longer painstakingly rolling each word up a mountain to balance next to the others. Instead, writing will become a free conversation between friends that bubbles along and cannot be stopped.
WHAT STOPS PEOPLE FROM BECOMING WRITERS?
Today, the publishing industry seems to be over flowing, and yet, the majority of people are not writing the book they have in mind, or at least not finishing it. If you tell someone that you are a writer, more likely, he would respond that he has a great idea for a book. This is usually the case as most people can write, and most people even believe they have a book they want to write.
Similarly, even after writing a few books, the fears and issues that hold the novice back do not always abandon the more established writer. The constant fear that the next artistic endeavor will be the one to fail is visible in many creative pursuits. You cannot count on success to kill your fears. You need to do that for yourself.
FINDING YOUR WRITING WEAKNESS
Below is a list of statements that writers often feel. Go through and determine the ones that are most true for you. If they are all true, keep the list. If none of them are true are you sure you are a writer?
1) You don't think you are meant to be a writer, because often you sit down and nothing comes out.
2) You hate showing people your work because you know they will judge you and realize you're a fake.
3) You might have written well in the past, but each new project just shows how far you've fallen.
4) Your writing is just boring. You know you want to say something deep and meaningful, but it just has no spark.
5) You feel completely dry and wrung out, like your brain is a desert and all you can hear is the cry of the vultures waiting for you to finally give up and die.
6) You've gotten your characters into trouble and you just don't think you're going to be able to get them out!
7) At times you've avoided even looking at your desk because the thought of trying to sit down and write just scares you because it's too hard.
8) You never know where to start with a story. You just have too many ideas in my head.
9) You can't continue writing until you know that each word is perfect, so you keep going over and over your work and never getting anywhere.
10) You have great ideas, but never get around to sitting down and writing them.
11) You don't understand editing, and your second draft is usually just a complete re-write.
12) You love writing, but hate worrying about spelling and grammar, as they get in the way of a good session.
If you relate to any in 1-3, you will greatly benefit from getting to know your muse. Issues 4-6 come from your relationship with your genius. Issues 7 - 12 are to do with your youth and your elder. You might be completely stifling one for the sake of the other, or not utilizing one where you need to. If you can identify where your problems lie, then you know who you can team up with in order to solve them.
You will have to meet your allies to overcome these problems and eventually eliminate your fear of writing.
Even if you have already begun and now face a different stumbling block in the course of your work, getting to know your creative personas will save you. They have a purpose at every stage of the writing process and will help the words come more easily. You will find that you are no longer painstakingly rolling each word up a mountain to balance next to the others. Instead, writing will become a free conversation between friends that bubbles along and cannot be stopped.
WHAT STOPS PEOPLE FROM BECOMING WRITERS?
Today, the publishing industry seems to be over flowing, and yet, the majority of people are not writing the book they have in mind, or at least not finishing it. If you tell someone that you are a writer, more likely, he would respond that he has a great idea for a book. This is usually the case as most people can write, and most people even believe they have a book they want to write.
Similarly, even after writing a few books, the fears and issues that hold the novice back do not always abandon the more established writer. The constant fear that the next artistic endeavor will be the one to fail is visible in many creative pursuits. You cannot count on success to kill your fears. You need to do that for yourself.
FINDING YOUR WRITING WEAKNESS
Below is a list of statements that writers often feel. Go through and determine the ones that are most true for you. If they are all true, keep the list. If none of them are true are you sure you are a writer?
1) You don't think you are meant to be a writer, because often you sit down and nothing comes out.
2) You hate showing people your work because you know they will judge you and realize you're a fake.
3) You might have written well in the past, but each new project just shows how far you've fallen.
4) Your writing is just boring. You know you want to say something deep and meaningful, but it just has no spark.
5) You feel completely dry and wrung out, like your brain is a desert and all you can hear is the cry of the vultures waiting for you to finally give up and die.
6) You've gotten your characters into trouble and you just don't think you're going to be able to get them out!
7) At times you've avoided even looking at your desk because the thought of trying to sit down and write just scares you because it's too hard.
8) You never know where to start with a story. You just have too many ideas in my head.
9) You can't continue writing until you know that each word is perfect, so you keep going over and over your work and never getting anywhere.
10) You have great ideas, but never get around to sitting down and writing them.
11) You don't understand editing, and your second draft is usually just a complete re-write.
12) You love writing, but hate worrying about spelling and grammar, as they get in the way of a good session.
If you relate to any in 1-3, you will greatly benefit from getting to know your muse. Issues 4-6 come from your relationship with your genius. Issues 7 - 12 are to do with your youth and your elder. You might be completely stifling one for the sake of the other, or not utilizing one where you need to. If you can identify where your problems lie, then you know who you can team up with in order to solve them.
You will have to meet your allies to overcome these problems and eventually eliminate your fear of writing.
About the Author:
More about identifying your allies is discussed in another article. You can also find relevant information at Buffy Greentree's blog site.
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