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Traci Clark

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Writing without Future Problems

October 22, 2015

I don’t know about you, but sometimes I don’t write. Okay, there’s been a lot of times when I haven’t written. Too many times actually. And then there’s what I do instead of writing. Sometimes while not writing, I actually think about my writing; this is mostly productive—kind of like daydreaming in my character.  Other times, I may spend 30 minutes or more reading about some tangent after I look up an obscure reference for my book, but I really don’t mind this either (seriously though, if you don’t know about wood ducks, they are awesome).  More often than not, my non-writing involves a swirling loop in my brain of what I should be doing but currently am not. So I asked my writing partner to see if he ever experienced anything like this and, also, to get a double check on my sanity.  “It’s not that I don’t know what to write, it’s like I can’t write sometimes. Does that make sense?”  My writing partner is the type who can just crank. I don’t mean to be disparaging; he’s faced his own set of writing problems; we all struggle; we just do it in our own way.  But my extremely lovely writing partner can authentically be non-judgmental in times like these, and after I gave him some more details of my non-writing time, he calmly but assertively stated, “Those are future problems. You just need to concentrate on what is going on now.” He has a way with words. And these words stuck. Writing without future problems, besides being productive, is actually really, really fun.

In Writing Tags Writing, Writer's Block, Writing ideas, Creativity Block, Wood ducks
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