Jeremiah Tolbert

Writer | Photographer | Web Designer

On Writing Motivation

Quaero_verum asks:

You’ve prob­a­bly already writ­ten about 1,000 posts on it already, but moti­va­tion is my sore spot at the moment. As in, “sit thy butt down and just write!”

Also, when I do write, I sit and stare at the blank white screen for a lonnnng time. I am find­ing it hard to even churn out “free-writes”.…

My advice to you is sim­ple. Don’t force it. If you’re going through a period of low moti­va­tion, you may need to recharge your cre­ative bat­ter­ies. This is some­thing that I’ve had to learn the hard way.

Creative energy is a very poorly under­stood topic in my expe­ri­ence. Some man­age it very well and are able to be con­sis­tently, highly pro­duc­tive. See Jay Lake write a novel in a hand­ful of weeks. Others strug­gle for a decade. The prod­uct isn’t nec­es­sar­ily bet­ter in either case.

It’s very impor­tant to give your self oppor­tu­nity to write. But if you don’t write, it’s not nec­es­sar­ily because you’re lazy. Your energy could be low. You might not have any­thing to say right now. Maybe you’d rather draw, or take a pho­to­graph to express what you’re feel­ing. Who knows. The impor­tant thing is not to beat your­self up.

Lastly, I’d like you to go watch this pre­sen­ta­tion by Amy Tan from the TED Talks recently. She talks about how we per­cieve cre­ativ­ity, and she makes some very inter­est­ing points.

Watch the Amy Tan talk here.

Do any of you have any fur­ther advice on the sub­ject? I’m really curi­ous to hear what oth­ers think about cre­ative energy. It’s a topic that I’m only just start­ing to develop some the­o­ries about, espe­cially as it per­tains to my own work.

Tagged as: , , ,

4 Responses »

  1. It doesn’t always work, but some­times when I’m stuck on a story I’m writ­ing, I’ll pick up what­ever book I hap­pen to be read­ing and read a chap­ter. When I go back to write, more times than not I’ll get at least another page down.

  2. Sometimes I’ll use trig­ger places or objects. Once or twice a year I go for a writ­ing walk around a ceme­tery near my house. Other times I’ll han­dle some nos­tal­gic thing, like the bot­tle from when I was tak­ing testosterone.

  3. William Gibson does some­thing sim­i­lar to Rob when he’s work­ing on a novel, though he uses Google. As soon as he dis­cov­ers some­thing online that inter­ests him, he adds it to his story.

  4. I feel exactly the same way, redun­dancy, impend­ing finan­cial cat­a­stro­phe, no sign of work or income.….it all adds up, I don’t have a sin­gle cre­ative thought in my head right now. People often say to me “so, you have all this free time to write…” but actu­ally most of my free time is spent try­ing to get a job and when I am free the last thing I feel like doing is writing.

    It’s a shame to say it, and I know it sounds like an excuse, but some­times life just doe get in the way.

Leave a Response