RepresentingCaution
Level 37 ? ? Pronouns: she/whore ♀
- Joined
- Apr 15, 2020
- Messages
- 9,786
- Points
- 233
Before my baby popped out of me and I had to hold my nipple in his mouth at bedtime, I would write a little before going to sleep every night.
Lol i have this thing i do in my mind i just have me1 threaten me2 and force them to workWait, I actually have motivation to write? Thats news to me....
Well, to be fair, the only time I have motivation to write is only when I'm bored or threaten to kill myself just to continue writing.
And the threaten part.... Its either that I basically go 'Wait, why do I even need to write' to 'why threaten myself to die when I'm already dead inside'..... it kinda took it over but in reverse instead.... hahahaha......
haha......
ha..... ha..... haha.....
*Starts Loading the gun*
True.The joy of finishing something you started is beyond words.
Motivation is the easiest thing to find tbh... And honestly, if you can't find the motivation for it, I think writing might not be for you.
Between finding motivation to write and actually writing though, there is a big hurdle to cross... Mainly, procrastination. As well some other stuff like Writer's Block, lack of inspiration, some game that makes you lose track of time and yada yada... But procrastination is like, 10000x stronger than those other things from my experience.
As for how to bypass procrastination... Uhn... It's hard. Here are many different methods that may work to different extents depending on each person, I have tried pretty much all of it myself:
And uhn... That's about all I can think of. At the end of the day, all of those methods will only help you sit down on your chair and open your writing document... But that's it. They'll only help, actually doing it and actually writing it depends on you.
- Making a schedule.
- Desperately needing money and having some way of instantly monetizing your work.
- Talking to a psychologist.
- Taking meds from a psychiatrist.
- Releasing chapters as you finish writing them AND getting comments from readers that are invested in your story (the second part doesn't depend on you, but it's one of the things that helped me the most when I was writing my first novel).
- Getting a boyfriend (I swear it helps, believe me).
- Setting a work environment.
- Staying away from your phone during writing hours.
- Making your writing hours as hours that "You do not need to write, but you will not allow yourself to do anything else... Generally, that will make you write, because it's less boring than do nothing" is a tip I got from the blog of a famous author (forgot their name), though I have never been able to have a strong enough will to follow through with this.
- Blocking your favorite sites/hobbies that make you waste most hours until you actually do your share of writing for the day (This one can actually make you even less productive, mind you, so do this one with caution).
Personally speaking, it took me 5 years of trying to work from home-office until I started getting some results from this... Which is what is allowing me to pay my bills by... Translating.
Writing is my dream job, and I plan to one day substitute the translation for writing, but... I'm still struggling to regularly translate 5 chapters/week, so... I'll have to get steady on that front before I can go back to writing regularly.
So uhn... Good luck. It's pretty hard to overcome procrastination, and while some people have it easier than others, pretty much everyone struggles with it to some extent. Do your best~
I totally agree! The hard part is actually starting, usually it's easier to keep going once you start! \(^^)/I've found that the best answer is often to not overthink things and just start writing and keep going
For one, you have to know one way or the other that someone reads your story. The Reader number isn't helpful either, if you look deeper into who's staying up to date with the story you are discouraged when you see 5 out of 50+ are actually at the recent chapter.I got so sick of my procrastinating habits that I just wrote up a prologue and a first chapter, based on a random idea that I had on my desktop, and released them on SH as soon as they were ready. From there, I managed to keep a steady pace and release a chapter every couple of days with my initial motivation.
At that point, I told myself that I could stick to a steady schedule and release three times a week. And I more or less have, since I stated that promise. I've found out that I can work very diligently if I feel like I have any sort of an obligation, and it turns out that knowing that some people read it regularly, and that I've promised updates, is enough for me to convince myself that I have one.
Since I had absolutely nothing planned when I started, that has meant working on it on a daily basis. Mind you, I do the majority of the writing on the days that I make the releases, but I still need to prepare the rough outlines of the coming chapters on the off days, and also try to actually plan out the story further ahead. I've surprised myself by actually working on this at least a little every day for over a month, but I plan to keep it up.