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"There are no problems - only opportunities to be creative." Dorye Roettger
"As the season of believing seems to wind down let me gently remind you that many dreams still wait in the wings. Many authentic sparks must be fanned before passion performs her perfect work in you. Throw another log on the fire." Sarah Ban Breathnach
"I am always doing that which I can not do, in order that I may learn how to do it." Pablo Picasso
"To exist is to change, to change is to mature, to mature is to go on creating oneself endlessly." Henri Bergson
"Some men throw their gifts away on a life of mediocrity, great men throw everything they have into their gifts and achieve a life of success." Greg Werner
"To live a creative life, we must lose our fear of being wrong." Joseph Chilton Pierce
"Creativity is inventing, experimenting, growing, taking risks, breaking rules, making mistakes, and having fun." Mary Lou Cook
"There are two ways of being creative. One can sing and dance. Or one can create an environment in which singers and dancers flourish." Warren G. Bennis
"I'm always thinking about creating. My future starts when I wake up every morning. Every day I find something creative to do with my life." Miles Davis
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Writers Block and Goal Setting
By Laraine Anne Barker
What is writer's block? How can writers protect themselves against it? What can they do if they find themselves suffering from it.
Well, if we knew the answers to these questions I guess there would no longer be such a thing as writer's block.
Writer's block can take many forms, but what it amounts to is a time (which may be as short as a day) in which you produced nothing on your project even though you perhaps sat at your computer all day--obviously doing everything but writing.
RUNNING OUT OF IDEAS The worst form is when you've finished one project and weeks or months later you still have no ideas for another one. What can you do?
1. Start reading the work of other writers in your genre with the deliberate intention of garnering ideas for your next story/novel. As long as you don't slavishly copy someone else's plot, there's nothing wrong with using another writer's idea.
2. Read books on writing that specifically address how to find ideas. Kate Grenville's THE WRITING BOOK is one such book. Look in your local library (or search on amazon.com) for others.
3. Take two or three things at random and plot a story around them--for instance, an umbrella, a squashed sandwich, a lost briefcase. Who owns the umbrella? What's it like? Good as new, or broken? From this choice you can then work out what its owner is like. Then deal with the other items and their owners in a similar way. Find a reason to bring them together--perhaps the contents of the lost briefcase. Or maybe the briefcase wasn't lost but stolen ...
WORDS JUST WON'T COME When you're working on a book or story but not producing anything (for some reason that you can't fathom, the words won't come) you might find many ideas from other writers useful:
1. Go for a long walk and think about your story, but don't force anything. Maybe imagine yourself interviewing your characters.
2. Carry on interviewing your characters at your computer when you return from your walk.
3. Forget about writing and spend the day reading something--preferably in your genre, though you might find reading something entirely different more useful.
4. Write about an incident in your own life. Now turn it upside down, twist it around; anything to set the juices flowing.
5. Try No. 3 in RUNNING OUT OF IDEAS.
Personally, I haven't found any suggestion like these that work for me. I didn't worry about writer's block in the early stages of my career, simply because it didn't happen to me. I regularly wrote about 1,000 words a day for several years and expected life to continue like that. (How naive can you be! *G*) It was only once I started learning something about the writing craft (really learning) that I slowed down. The more I learned the slower I became. I was horrified when a novel just under 40,000 words took me seven months. But the next one was worse: it took nine! It was harder than trying to squeeze juice from dry lemons (more like trying to get lemon juice from stones).
However, over the years I found that the only way for me personally to overcome writer's block was the most difficult, most unpalatable of all--sitting down and forcing myself to work on my novel, trying not to worry that what I wrote might not be good enough; after all, I could always change it. Judging from my own experience, you'll most likely find that what you write when you'd rather do anything else but write isn't much worse than what you produce when you're feeling inspired. After I'd worked out this solution for myself, I did find a few writers who suggested it, but not many favoured it. It needs a huge dose of something every writer must have to succeed: self-discipline. The strange thing is that if you persevere it becomes easier (until the next time, that is!)
So, if you find yourself producing nothing even though you spend hours at your computer, maybe it's time to:
SET SOME GOALS
1. First you must crystallise your thinking so that you know exactly what you want to achieve. Where do you want to be six months from now? A year? Five years? Ten years?
2. Now write down these goals, a deadline for achieving each one, and what you intend to do to achieve them. Start with a daily goal (maybe to write so many words every day)Then move on to a weekly one (perhaps to submit a short story or write a full chapter of your novel every week), a monthly one, and so on. Review these goals regularly.
3. You must have a burning desire for what you want--a desire so strong it hurts. Without this you won't get anywhere. Without it you simply won't have what it takes to actively pursue your goals. Give yourself a pep talk in the mirror every morning--preferably out loud.
4. You must develop supreme self-confidence in your ability to achieve your goals. This is very difficult when you're receiving rejections every few weeks; these nasties have a habit of battering your confidence to dust.
5. Lastly (and this is possibly the most important) you must have unshakeable determination--an iron-willed resolve to follow your plan through IN SPITE OF what other people say, think or do. Some people call it perseverance. I call it sheer bloody-mindedness. It's an "I'll show the blighters!" attitude that refuses to die. Rather than battering-rams to your self-esteem, rejections must be regarded as fuel to fan the flames of your desire!
Finally, I'd like to wish you good luck with your goals.
© L A Barker Enterprises All rights reserved
Laraine Anne Barker writes fantasy for young people. Visit her web site at Fantasy for Children & Young Adults for FREE stories and novel excerpts. Sign up for the NOVELLA OF THE MONTH CLUB, absolutely FREE!
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Expect the Unexpected (Or You Won't Find It): A Creativity Tool Based on the Ancient Wisdom of Heraclitus
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By Roger Von Oech. "The ancient Greek philosopher Heraclitus was famous for his brilliant and provocative sayings. Today, more than 2,500 years after they were written, his ideas about life, nature, and the cosmos remain as startlingly original as ever. In Expect the Unexpected (Or You Won't Find It), Roger von Oech uses thirty of Heraclitus' epigrams as springboards to dazzling creativity. Treating each saying as an inexhaustible source of inspiration, he supplies amusing anecdotes, mind-bending riddles, hidden jokes, and intriguing questions designed to topple old habits of thought and fire the imagination.
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Your Heart's Desire : Instructions for Creating the Life You Really Want
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By Sonia Choquette. "Nationally known intuitive and spiritual leader Sonia Choquette shares the nine universal principles for creating the reality of your dreams. Step by step, with practical advice, specific exercises, and modern-day parables, she teaches readers to make the changes in thought and behavior that will lead them to the attainment of their most heartfelt desires."
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Affirmations for Artists
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by Eric Maisel. "Creativity requires introspection, self-examination, and a willingness to take risks. Because of this, artists are perhaps more susceptible to self-doubt and despair than those who do not court the creative muses. This book of affirmations is compiled with the special needs of artistic persons in mind. Arranged in alphabetical order by topic (Disbelief, Imitation, Talent), each page includes a handful of relevant quotations by writers, musicians, actors, or other creative people, a commentary by the author, and, of course, an affirmation."
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