Could someone help me cure writer's block?

Joelle

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When I started reading books at around my 10 years of age or so... it was nice, but the frustrating thing was that the first book I read was incomplete. From that day I started disliking unfinished books.
But now that I'm a writer, I see what the writers then were facing.
To be honest right now, as much as I hate unfinished books, I want to pause my current work and start a new one, and when I tried starting the new one, I felt unmotivated to write anything anymore.
In summary... I have a bad case of writer's block, but I do not want to leave my books unfinished.
Can someone please help me, this is frustrating.???????
 

AliceMoonvale

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Not sure if it helps, but I often struggle to find the motivation to finish editing my chapters, insert extra scenes, etc. I'll try reading webtoons, manhwas, etc., in similar genres I like. After reading enough, I'll slowly become more motivated to continue my own story. The entertainment and some inspiration I get help me slowly ease back into my own novel.

Essentially, take a break and do something fun for a while ~
 

L1aei

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When I started reading books at around my 10 years of age or so... it was nice, but the frustrating thing was that the first book I read was incomplete. From that day I started disliking unfinished books.
But now that I'm a writer, I see what the writers then were facing.
To be honest right now, as much as I hate unfinished books, I want to pause my current work and start a new one, and when I tried starting the new one, I felt unmotivated to write anything anymore.
In summary... I have a bad case of writer's block, but I do not want to leave my books unfinished.
Can someone please help me, this is frustrating.???????
Just a suggestion, but try the "Stephen King Method" by jotting down any creative idea or scene that flutters inside your wonderful cranium and stuff it in a file or do what King does by keeping a nightstand drawer full of sticky notes until the concept can be used. Someday, that idea might be expanded on and you could even use it in either your old or new story.

Rooting for you! :blob_hug:
 

ArchlordZero

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I'm in the same boat, but mainly because the current novel I'm writing is a flop. I want to start over since I already have another solid novel idea:blob_teary:
 

CharlesEBrown

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The writers who never experience writer's block are the ones with several stories going at once - Isaac Asimov, Piers Anthony, a few others (heck, myself back when I was unemployed). Just go with the second story for a bit and ignore the "guilt" at "abandoning" the first. Or start a third.
 

L1aei

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The writers who never experience writer's block are the ones with several stories going at once - Isaac Asimov, Piers Anthony, a few others (heck, myself back when I was unemployed). Just go with the second story for a bit and ignore the "guilt" at "abandoning" the first. Or start a third.
Not to cause conflict, but there is a missing point here. I want to add that someone like Asimov switched gears whenever writing a new novel. Not sure about the other guy, but, yeah, I know Asimov because I was really curious if he was the inspiration for Warhammer 40K. Uh, anyways, that's going off topic... sorry. :blob_hide:

Those historic and prolific authors had some cognitive function I couldn't begin to comprehend too. They changed things up whenever starting a new project. You know, different genres. It was more like a palate cleanser. Writing two or more novels that have similar genres can (not meaning it will) lead to a more shallow investment because not many writers want their works to be an imperfect clone of the last novel. :blob_sweat:
 

CharlesEBrown

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Not to cause conflict, but there is a missing point here. I want to add that someone like Asimov switched gears whenever writing a new novel. Not sure about the other guy, but, yeah, I know Asimov because I was really curious if he was the inspiration for Warhammer 40K. Uh, anyways, that's going off topic... sorry. :blob_hide:

Those historic and prolific authors had some cognitive function I couldn't begin to comprehend too. They changed things up whenever starting a new project. You know, different genres. It was more like a palate cleanser. Writing two or more novels that have similar genres can (not meaning it will) lead to a more shallow investment because not many writers want their works to be an imperfect clone of the last novel. :blob_sweat:
Not sure if this is still true, but Asimov was once listed as the only author with at least one work in each of the major classes of the Dewey Decimal System.
Piers Anthony started out with (adult!) science fiction (I had a girlfriend who was really into his earlier stuff - Bio of a Space Tyrant, Chthon), from what I gather, then moved to (very juvenile) Fantasy (the Xanth series), before "splitting the difference" with the Proton/Phase cycle of books, stepping out to mostly contemporary/urban fantasy for the Incarnations of Immortality series, and moving the Xanth series closer to adult material (I've heard he gets pretty raw in the last few books there but stopped at around 10 - or two after the one where he used a pun I suggested).
 

L1aei

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Not sure if this is still true, but Asimov was once listed as the only author with at least one work in each of the major classes of the Dewey Decimal System.
Piers Anthony started out with (adult!) science fiction (I had a girlfriend who was really into his earlier stuff - Bio of a Space Tyrant, Chthon), from what I gather, then moved to (very juvenile) Fantasy (the Xanth series), before "splitting the difference" with the Proton/Phase cycle of books, stepping out to mostly contemporary/urban fantasy for the Incarnations of Immortality series, and moving the Xanth series closer to adult material (I've heard he gets pretty raw in the last few books there but stopped at around 10 - or two after the one where he used a pun I suggested).
Ah, I see where their, ahem, drive came from. :blob_whistle:

Thank you for providing the context on those authors and their range of work. It helps clarify their unique approach to writing multiple projects. :blob_cookie:
 

CharlesEBrown

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Anthony (Piers Anthony Dillingham Jacob) actually wrote short essays in a lot of his books (anywhere from one to ten pages long) about his process, the hardware and, later, software he relied on, and what books he was working on. Suspect he wrote THOSE when he was experiencing a bit of block - and HE mentioned that the only other author he'd met who wrote the way he did, with several projects at once - was Asimov.
An interesting point too is that he would only write "sales pitches" for stories he hadn't sold and then leave those sitting around (physically at first, in digital files later), and just write what he had contracted for, or the little essays he added about his process.
 

Eldoria

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Take a break and get some fresh air. Do some outdoor activities. Sometimes the brain needs some entertainment, too. Continuously writing fiction without a break will only drain your creative energy! Trust me!
 

whitesculptor

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Take a walk outside for leisure. Touch grass. Put your feet on sand and let the waves strike up to your knees.
It likely won't directly help but it'll relax your mind.
At night, set a daily count of 500 words, and no matter what happens, you will write that much.
At some point, it becomes a good habit, and the brain will get used to do it.
Never forget that the brain needs to be trained. Being diligent and not lazy is tough for most people. A lot of humanity potential rotten thanks to the defensive brain mechanism of, too hard, too much, too this, too that. They're excuses created by our brain to not spend energy.
You got this. You and only you, for you, yourself. Never quit. Never ever.
 

L1aei

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Take a break and get some fresh air. Do some outdoor activities. Sometimes the brain needs some entertainment, too. Continuously writing fiction without a break will only drain your creative energy! Trust me!
The mind's the one running the whole machine, and it absolutely pushes back when you grind it too hard. Keep ramming that wall of fatigue and it'll just get taller. So yeah, I'm fully on board with that suggestion on taking cheat days. :blob_party:
 

HouseOfUkiro

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When I started reading books at around my 10 years of age or so... it was nice, but the frustrating thing was that the first book I read was incomplete. From that day I started disliking unfinished books.
But now that I'm a writer, I see what the writers then were facing.
To be honest right now, as much as I hate unfinished books, I want to pause my current work and start a new one, and when I tried starting the new one, I felt unmotivated to write anything anymore.
In summary... I have a bad case of writer's block, but I do not want to leave my books unfinished.
Can someone please help me, this is frustrating.???????
One word: microdosing.
 

C.Details

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Sometimes when writing is too difficult or ideas avoid me, I take a break. Read about interesting things like did you know there's a snake where the edge of it's tail looks like a spider?

If not looking things up then go outside, eat somewhere new, or go some where with old or unique buildings. You don't need to think about your writing but I like to think about current or up coming arcs.
 

CinnaSloth

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It doesn't sound like writer's block. It sounds like guilt.

You have a book, and you want to finish it, but you have all these new, fresh ideas, and the creative drive to bring those new thoughts into fruition, but can't because you subconsciously feel guilty about ditching the old book to write that "something new".
Your mind is hesitant to continue because you keep looking back.

Ask yourself, Do you honestly believe you'll come back to the old book later? or is it truly a lost cause?

You knowing the disappointment of picking up, and reading, unfinished books rings off in your head.
I think every Author knows this kind of disappointment. -And because of it, there are those that will tell you to finish it, or take a break then finish it. Do this, or do that, then finish. It needs to be finished. Readers would want it to be finished. You already published, so it needs an end. It's expected to have an end.. etc etc.

But you just have to tell yourself, "An unfinished book is fine to leave behind"; Working on something else is okay. Maybe, one day, you'll feel motivated to look into, or rewrite, or continue the old book. But you have to be honest with yourself today. Maybe it just isn't that time. It could be for a multitude of reasons: The genre is taxing on your psyche. You don't feel adequate enough to give the emotion the book needs to portray. It's too serious of a novel that doesn't mix with your own personality; Maybe it isn't serious enough. There's tons of reason why your mind isn't mixing with this book.

Let it sit. Give it a week. Read it from the start until the part you wrote up to. Either, you like what you're reading, and will look forward to continue writing, ...or you just don't, and It's just not your style. Whichever you choose, it's fine. It'll be fine, the world goes on. Put it aside. You don't need to forget it exists, but know that it needs to be pushed aside. Not because you hate it, but because you need a break from it. You can't work yourself over for not giving it the attention its begging from you every time you want to write the other stuff. Make an archive. A personal shelf, or file where books can sit, and wait.
If you pick them back up, great! Enjoy writing.
If not, learn something about yourself from them. Why are they in the archive? What gave you the feeling: "this book is keeping me from writing"? Learn from it. Learning who you are as a person is always something worth looking into. Any little bit opens new doors.

I personally have an archive of.. (Let me check.) 28 either completed, unfinished, half-written, or barely started books that aren't published. Here on SH, I have 1 single book I'm currently writing, and it's my least serious.. My more serious books are longer, or more difficult to write. I use this book I have here to throw my random ideas into. It's a hodgepodge of nonsense. But it's a book.

Having other sources to dump your ideas can help clear your head for what you feel you need to work on, or even excite you to branch out into other genres. But the fact is, you need to accept that kind of attitude. You need to accept that some books, whether you love them or not, are sometimes.. unwritable.. -For now, at least. Maybe in the future, you'll have the inspiration to pick it back up.

Anyway, I'm no teacher, or psychiatrist. The only person that can figure out your head, is you.
-and medical professionals, but I'm trying to be profound.
 

DismaiNaim

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My solution for writer's block: go into it planning to delete everything and start over. Takes the pressure off from it having to be any good.
 

L1aei

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My solution for writer's block: go into it planning to delete everything and start over. Takes the pressure off from it having to be any good.
There's definitely merit to that approach. I've heard other writers say they get stuck because something new in the story clashes with what they wrote earlier, and it throws off the whole consistency. Starting over with that issue in mind can help them avoid that cycle of destruction. :blob_nom:
 

Joelle

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It doesn't sound like writer's block. It sounds like guilt.

You have a book, and you want to finish it, but you have all these new, fresh ideas, and the creative drive to bring those new thoughts into fruition, but can't because you subconsciously feel guilty about ditching the old book to write that "something new".
Your mind is hesitant to continue because you keep looking back.

Ask yourself, Do you honestly believe you'll come back to the old book later? or is it truly a lost cause?

You knowing the disappointment of picking up, and reading, unfinished books rings off in your head.
I think every Author knows this kind of disappointment. -And because of it, there are those that will tell you to finish it, or take a break then finish it. Do this, or do that, then finish. It needs to be finished. Readers would want it to be finished. You already published, so it needs an end. It's expected to have an end.. etc etc.

But you just have to tell yourself, "An unfinished book is fine to leave behind"; Working on something else is okay. Maybe, one day, you'll feel motivated to look into, or rewrite, or continue the old book. But you have to be honest with yourself today. Maybe it just isn't that time. It could be for a multitude of reasons: The genre is taxing on your psyche. You don't feel adequate enough to give the emotion the book needs to portray. It's too serious of a novel that doesn't mix with your own personality; Maybe it isn't serious enough. There's tons of reason why your mind isn't mixing with this book.

Let it sit. Give it a week. Read it from the start until the part you wrote up to. Either, you like what you're reading, and will look forward to continue writing, ...or you just don't, and It's just not your style. Whichever you choose, it's fine. It'll be fine, the world goes on. Put it aside. You don't need to forget it exists, but know that it needs to be pushed aside. Not because you hate it, but because you need a break from it. You can't work yourself over for not giving it the attention its begging from you every time you want to write the other stuff. Make an archive. A personal shelf, or file where books can sit, and wait.
If you pick them back up, great! Enjoy writing.
If not, learn something about yourself from them. Why are they in the archive? What gave you the feeling: "this book is keeping me from writing"? Learn from it. Learning who you are as a person is always something worth looking into. Any little bit opens new doors.

I personally have an archive of.. (Let me check.) 28 either completed, unfinished, half-written, or barely started books that aren't published. Here on SH, I have 1 single book I'm currently writing, and it's my least serious.. My more serious books are longer, or more difficult to write. I use this book I have here to throw my random ideas into. It's a hodgepodge of nonsense. But it's a book.

Having other sources to dump your ideas can help clear your head for what you feel you need to work on, or even excite you to branch out into other genres. But the fact is, you need to accept that kind of attitude. You need to accept that some books, whether you love them or not, are sometimes.. unwritable.. -For now, at least. Maybe in the future, you'll have the inspiration to pick it back up.

Anyway, I'm no teacher, or psychiatrist. The only person that can figure out your head, is you.
-and medical professionals, but I'm trying to be profound.
You're right. My first book doesn't really align with my interest or what I'm usually interested in reading. I just got that idea from a manga I read but looking at it now, I think I'll pause and continue with what I like, i.e LitRPG
 
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