Glad to see I'm not alone in my struggle with the ice-cake!
Esoteric wrote:hehe, no seriously. I believe that is a very common problem for wanna-be writers, because frankly, writing is work. And that's why professionals get paid, because they make themselves write (and write very well) even when they don't want to.
Even on my days off I struggle and I get paid I don't think I'd be able to focus on writing any easier. Seriously, I don't know how Stephen King can write for five to six hours straight.
Esoteric wrote:I have found to some degree, that I can effect my writing attention with music. If I always listen to certain music while writing a particular story, I tend to be able to focus better on the task. This may not work for everyone though.
I can't write with music - any kind of music be it symphonic or singing - because it distracts me too much. I can write with thunder in the background, with people screaming around me, but I find music too distracting. But that's just me!
But I should maybe try to use it to get in the mood for writing.
TurkishMonky wrote:However, fictional story wise, if i'm relaxed and calm, the words will just flow.
I seldom feel relaxed and calm when I try to write because of the compulsion to do something else and the irritation it causes.
However if I get writing then everything flows naturally.
uc pseudonym wrote:At times, yes. This is especially the case when the scene to be written is not one I am particularly thrilled about (and here I presume you refer to fiction writing). Generally speaking I have found that I can write, and that after a short period of writing I begin to enjoy it.
I experience it the same. I suppose most writers have a malaise around getting started, if the posts here and otherplaces on writers are any indication.
uc pseudonym wrote:However, getting started is the hardest part. To help you in that area I have several suggestions, though I do not gaurantee they will work for you in the slightest. First, have a good idea how you want to start (a sentence, or a narrative idea). Without that, it is very easy to just sit and stare at your screen, then do something else.
Yes, that sounds like a good idea. Now that you mention it when I don't have a well-thought out chapter to write I seem to get stuck. I'll have to try and think it out properly then.
uc pseudonym wrote:Third, try to avoid waiting before writing. A computer booting up is a good example]
Hmmmm. My PC does take an awefully long time to boot (CURSE YOU ANTI-SPYWARE SOFTWARE!) so I'll keep that in mind next time I try to write.
SirThought2Much wrote:Not to mention I'm kinda still stuck on a plot point...
Ugh! I hate it when that happens! It doesn't matter how much you plan ahead, these things sometimes just happen. I also recently had to double-back and rewrite several chapters in order to axe a character whom I realized did not do anything for the story. He was an interesting and hopefully complex character, but his presence took the story into levels where it would do the tale no good.
But thanks for all the replies and suggestions, everybody!! Its good to know I'm not alone!