I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: I seldom get
writer’s block but when I do it’s frightening. However, I’ve finally realized
the one thing that will make it worse and even keep my muse firmly
blocked--staring at the blank page.
Don’t do this.
LOL! Well, don’t!
Seriously, though, that empty expanse of white tricks your
brain into believing there are no ideas, that the muse is dead or passed out
behind the couch with an empty fifth of whip-cream-flavored vodka [the lazy bitch!].
Don’t fall for the blank page. It’s a ruse of the Furies. It’s a weapon of the
bad guy who sits on your shoulder. It’s the excuse we all use to do other
things from laundry to sorting the sock drawer and more.
I find this happens to me the most after I’ve been working
like mad on more than one manuscript. This occurred last fall when I wrote
three holiday stories right after edits and promo for Fire in Winter, a short
tale that’s part of The Edge series. I guess Naomi’s new, wintry-hot lover
inspired me, lol. Take a bit of handsome, blue-eyed frost, some sex toys, being
cooped up while it dumps snow outside…
Uh… What was a talking about?
Oh, yeah. The blank page.
Naomi even gets gifts of ice sculptures from her hunky
winter representative, and although he turns down the heat in her house, he
turns her thermostat up, up, up. And then he—
[Looks around at all the quirked eyebrows and stares]
I wandered off again, didn’t I?
Anyhoo, if you complete several manuscripts within a close
time frame, always remember to give yourself at least a week off before you
start pounding the keyboard again. I speak from experience. An exhausted brain
will refuse to cooperate, and if you stare at a blank page, that only compounds
matters. Walk away from the laptop or PC and let your mind wander. That’s when
a blog topic or a new plot will pop into your head.
But Naomi’s new man can pop things into her that—dang it if
this keeps up [no, not *that* up!], I’m gonna have to go find the hubby! I
won’t even get started on the hunky vamps of The Holiday Series or talk about
Richie and Albert. Too many dreamy guys! No, I’ll blame it on the climbing
temperatures here in eastern Ohio .
It was 2˚ the other morning and now, as I type this post, it’s 70˚ and I’m sweating. I’m blaming it
on the weather. Yeah, that’s it. The Weather!
Maybe.
Giveaway:
I find myself with several guest appearances this month so
my giveaway is going to be a little different. I’ll have a small giveaway at
each appearance, but at my last one for January, there will be a grand finale
prize. At each of my guest blogs, leave a meaningful comment and be entered to
win an e-book from my Molly Diamond (retired pen name www.MollyDiamond.com) backlist. Comment
at every stop and you’ll have more chances to win the grand prize on January 30th—a
nice, big coffee mug with goodies stuffed inside it AND an ebook!
Follow me at Twitter www.Twitter.com/FLBicknell
Join me at Facebook www.Facebook.com/faithbicknellbrown
Bio:
F.L. Bicknell's work has appeared in a wide range of genres
and publications such as: Would That It Were, Touch, GC, and Ohio Writer Magazine
as well as publications in Canada
and Turkey .
Under her now-retired pseudonym, Molly Diamond, she was a regular contributor
to Gent and Ruthie's Club and has had fiction published
in Hustler's Busty Beauties, Penthouse Variations, and Twenty 1 Lashes. Ms.
Bicknell is the author of several e-book and print titles, also writing as
Azura Ice, Amber Redd, Cutter Phoenix, and Kiyara Benoiti. She has served as co-editor
and managing editor for three different publishing houses. She is represented
by TriadaUS Literary Agency.
7 comments:
I've noticed that phenomenon, too, Faith. After working hard and finishing a few MS in quick succession it's always tough to get moving on something new. And it's a little bit scary!
Oh the terror of the blank page!
I've found if I have an ever handy file of WIPs writer's block is rarely an issue. But I agree, an exhausted mind is of little use in the creative process.
Hi ladies! Yes, there is definitely merit in having a rested, fresh mind and perspective.
Maybe it comes from being an artist, but I don't find the blank page scary at all.
I see all the possibilities. And I'm thinking what will I write next.
Yeah, that blank page is frightening. That's my excuse. ;) I'm working on a short story--well, I will be working on one after quarterly reports and 1099s are out.
I'll trade you. You can do the 1099s for me, Faith. I'll take to staring at the blank page. (g)
Hi Janice. That's a great way of looking at it!
Marci... Nooooo! [hides under bed]
Blank page would be a Great reason to grab a huge coffee! LOL! And then hopefully the muse would be working!
Thank you for the chance for the big prize! Have a great day!
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