Progress not perfection: power through writer鈥檚 block

A writing pad and pen

The campus is quieter these days. Most of the students are finishing up with exams and deadlines. I鈥檓 not too sure what other HDR students are doing over the break聽but I鈥檒l be writing.

I鈥檝e finished collecting all my data and now it鈥檚 down to the real scholarly work of analysis. 鈥淪cholarly鈥,聽what does that even mean? I do a quick look up via Google (yes, not very scholarly of me) and it comes up with results that define it as 鈥渋nvolving or relating to serious academic study鈥. I guess now I鈥檓 down to some serious work and I need some serious motivation to power through writing blocks. Here are a few tips that have worked for me and my peers. (Bonus: I鈥檝e included a whole heap of motivational quotes at the bottom of this post.)

Mind map. Sometimes the words just aren鈥檛 there and instead of keeping myself stuck, I try to use a visual alternative to chart my thoughts and ideas. I find that after a few minutes in, the keywords become phrases, and the phrases become sentences. It doesn鈥檛 take too long until I find my writing momentum.

Treats. Set a goal and promise to treat yourself as soon as you achieve it. It might even be worth writing each treat on a small piece of paper or a card and putting them all in a small box. Each time you accomplish a task you鈥檝e set for yourself, pick a card from this box.

Re-read your glory piece. Remind yourself, you鈥檝e got this. You鈥檝e accomplished so many of your goals already. Re-read a piece of written work you鈥檙e really proud of.

Wash the dishes. Just take a 5-minute break and step away from your writing. Mostly we find that taking a break to do an easy task, like washing the dishes, allows us to keep some of our thoughts on our writing while permitting us the opportunity of thinking about it from a different perspective.聽

Visit the library. Take a walk through the shelves. Read something relevant or read something irrelevant. The important thing is, you are giving yourself a brain break while also being open to some inspiration.

Write when it鈥檚 cold. Write when it鈥檚 4 in the morning and distractions are at a minimum. Well, maybe have a nice, steaming cup of coffee first. You don鈥檛 literally have to write this early聽but if you鈥檙e finding yourself stuck, writing at a different time to when you normally write might help, and writing in the chilly, early morning might spark some different ideas.

Have some motivation juice. What is motivation juice, you say? Well I guess anything that encourages you to keep going or reminds you to keep your eye on the prize. Do you have a playlist you use when you鈥檙e in the gym? Maybe put together a playlist that encourages you to keep going when writing is extra challenging. Do you have a vision board? Do you like quotes? Maybe some of these below might help.聽

  • "You can always edit a bad page. You can鈥檛 edit a blank page" - Jodi Picoult
  • "You can鈥檛 wait for inspiration. You have to go after it with a club." - Jack London
  • "No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader. No surprise in the writer, no surprise in the reader.鈥 - Robert Frost
  • "The most valuable of all talents is that of never using two words when one will do." - Thomas Jefferson
  • "I love deadlines. I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by." - Douglas Adams
  • "If you have no critics, you鈥檒l likely have no success." - Malcolm X
  • "If I waited for perfection, I would never write a word." - Margaret Atwood
  • 鈥淲ords are a lens to focus one鈥檚 mind.鈥 - Ayn Rand

I鈥檝e recently joined 鈥溾 and found them really helpful. With changes to restrictions given the pandemic, perhaps聽virtual "Shut Up and Write Sessions" would still be useful. Are there any effective strategies you鈥檝e used in the past to crush writer鈥檚 block? Tag us on IG

Tagged in What messes with your head, writing, phd