Celebrate Writing, Challenges, Editing Basics, Why Do I Need An Editor, Writer's Block

Writer’s Rut?

We’ve all had it.

Some of my clients have had it so badly they have had to extend a section submission deadline. My understanding is unending.  Sometimes words can create defeatist attitudes or self-fulfilling situations, especially if an author is already stressed. “Writer’s block” conjures harsh images, as though something beyond control is obstructing the process. Some vague, grey mass floating in front of the imagination; a wall so high and black there is no “through” or “over” to be manipulated or seen; characters standing motionless in an ever fading landscape that was once the writer’s developed world.

Phooey! Being a writer is not about giving up control and allowing some intangible blackness stop progress. Writing is a freeing of imagination, feeling, passion, and all those voices inside the mind.

I try to encourage writers with a new terminology. Writer’s Rut.

With writer’s rut one is simply mired, yet still trying to move. Wriggling back and forth, digging around, pushing hard against a tough spot, slodging through a squishy part. A rut implies there is a way out, and being stuck is temporary. Most importantly, it gives the writer the knowledge that this struggle will pass and liberation is completely in his or her control.

My suggestions are simple and obvious. Change your external world so the internal world will have a new outlet. Try leaving your office and setting up in the public library or at a coffee shop. Make a new habit, a new starting routine. Wasn’t it Hemingway who would rise early, cross his bedroom, cold and before relieving his bladder, to stand at a chest-high typewriter, pounding on the keys for a mandatory 10 minutes? I’m thinking that kind of change-up could produce something! Simplest of all, change what you write with – your tool.

1908 Miniature Underwood Typewriter
This could be a challenge!

Get off the computer keyboard and open a notebook. Try the clickity-clack of an old typewriter. Use a colored pencil instead of that boring black pen. Lots of talk-to-text programs exist with today’s technology – speak, say what’s on your mind. Talk to your character’s as if they were in the room with you. Just try something new.

What’s your worst Writer’s Rut experience? How did you deal with it?

Here are some great reads to help with your rut:

On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft
Received as a gift from a book group to which I once belonged.
Around the Writers Block
Received an advanced readers copy a while back.
The Writing Life
Received as a gift from my dad, long ago.