Jump to content
Words that sell, brands that succeed.

11 Unconventional Ways To Immediately Overcome Writers Block


Neville

kill-writers-block-w-background.png

Here's a quick guide for how to get over writer's block.  These are methods I've personally used very successfully, and I hope you scroll through this, find a good method, and get over writer's block too!

 

 

1.) Dictate The Words Into Your Phone

 

 

 

2.) Write Inside A Distraction Free Zone

 

 

 

3.) Use A Headline Formula

 

 

 

4.) Physically Alter Your State Of Mind

 

 

 

5.) Chemically Alter Your State Of Mind

 

 

 

 

6.) Follow A Writing Prompt

 

 

 

7.) Make A Constraint For Your Assignment

 

 

 

8.) Stop Being A Little Bitch About It

 

 

 

9.) Make An Outline

 

 

 

10.) Take A Nice Shower

 

 

 

 

11.) Copy Someone Else

 

Neville Signature

 

 

Download this entire Writer's Block post for your own files:

Click here to subscribe

Keep this in your files for whenever you have Writer's Block and need to get rid of it!

 

P.S. If you want more help with Writer's Block, checkout some of our Copywriting Tips for more inspiration!

 

P.P.S. Comment below what YOU do when you have writers block.  I am going to add (and draw!) more methods here based on the comments!

your-suggestion-draw

writer block calm.jpg


User Feedback

Recommended Comments



Guest Neville

Posted

Yup, this is much like what I do when I dictate into the phone. It's such a great method!
Link to comment
Guest Neville

Posted

Thank you Waqar! You literally have more access to information nowadays than the President Of The United States from just 20 years ago.

It's amazing how many resources we have, yet many people don't utilize them. They're there for the taking :)

Link to comment
Guest Neville

Posted

Nice! Thank you Max :)

I keep a "Swipe file" on my computers and my phone that I constantly add things that make me go "hmmm"

Link to comment
Guest Neville

Posted

Well I'm really glad you got something out of it Jordan :)

It seems like you add a constraint to start writing. You can also double-add another constraint like "I have to start writing in 10 minutes and the first sentence has to be "once upon a terrible time...""

That might poke your brain into thinking in a different way also!

Link to comment
Guest Neville

Posted

Thanks Denise! I think #8 is getting the most attention :)

The Pandora Deep House radio also doubles as my background music when people are over, it's great stuff!

Link to comment
Guest Sheiler

Posted

Love all the suggestions...But I've been getting into (again) something I got for free from Ramit Sethi's mentor at Stanford - whose name I can't recall right now - which was to form a tiny habit and grow it. So I make an agreement for a short period of time like so: "When I wash my hands in the bathroom, I will do 5 squats." And whenever I do this, I have to give myself a little sign / reward. I usually do a corny fist bump with the air above my head.

So for writing, and trying to come up with a tiny habit, I've also taken to something that Norman Mailer (the writer) used to do. His assistant wrote a book that said every day before writing, Mailer would play a few rounds of solitaire to get his head right. And then he proceeded to go upstairs to write his arse off.

My habit has involved the dog. When I wash my hands in the sink (because god knows one should always wash hands after walking a dog), I go to my notebook and write out 3 images I got while walking. I always get pictures when I'm walking. Pen on paper. And once I've done that, I can sometimes switch over to the computer to continue writing, even if it's a different subject. The hard part is if someone talks to me immediately after walking the dog. So I am considering another trigger.

Link to comment
Guest Say Your Excuses Out Loud / Impossible

Posted

[…] h/t to NevMed for this illustration that prompted this post […]
Link to comment
Guest Yatin Khulbe

Posted

Whenever I don't get any ideas, I simply scan passerby's expressions by standing on my balcony. As I live nearby buzzing road, l get the chance to a see a mix of a happy and sad bunch of people. The most hilarious are the telephonic conversations. Sometimes, people on phone forget they are walking on a busy road. As a result, they express they emote their extreme emotions without worrying about the surroundings. From small children to elderly citizens, I get the chance to read expressions by just standing on my balcony. At that time, I forget about any blocks (be it personal or related to my writing profession) and I completely immerse myself with their emotions. It may look absurd, but I feel relaxed by seeing the sea of emotions floating on people's face.
Link to comment
Guest Austin

Posted

The 5 minute mindset.

It's something I learned about recently that has made a huge difference in my ability to follow through or start working on something. It's a fun little productivity habit.

- Plan on giving up 5 minutes of your time towards your project, be it writing, business, exercise.

- Follow through & most often you'll find that once you're in the zone you keep going way past 5 minutes.

- AND... if not, well, 5 minutes done today. There are 5 more tomorrow. The fact is you made the effort.

Link to comment
Guest Lizzie

Posted

Perfection paralysis insists that I write nothing until I can exquisitely phrase brilliant ideas that will be loved by every person who reads them. Which means that I write nothing. So to get unblocked I go the opposite of #8 and totally release my Inner Bitch--employing profane language to throw off-the-wall, badly composed, poorly punctuated, incomplete thought fragments onto the page. Playing gangsta rap in the background is a bonus. (I am old enough to get senior discounts and not a fan of rap, but it has its place.) This process is the mud wrestling of writing--it's fun, it's ugly, it gets the ideas onto the page, and it gets me going.
Link to comment

Hi Guys

For me personally, I would bring the topic that I am writing up in a chat room. People here in Taiwan like to join English chat room and they always like to share: sometimes a book passage, or from their own reflection.

Also napping helps, as I read somewhere that many great scientist nap for new ideas and breakthroughs.

Cheers,

Ryu

Link to comment

Enjoyed the words, and the artwork (Especially #4) :)

I alternate depending on the circumstances -

I go out, take a nap, see some TV, talk to someone (cats included) let social media swallow me...

I can't drink coffee or alcohol but have my own little herbal mind softner...

But lately, I am trying to teach myself to simply plow through,

except it will probably be crap, and still put it on the page as part of the process.

Maybe it's silly or cliche, but I feel that doubts and fears are my worst writers block

This is my way of showing myself "what is the worst thing that can happen"...

After that I can move on and know that what ever will come next will probebly be better :)

Link to comment
Guest Jacob

Posted

Great stuff Nev!

Let me throw my 5pence (I'm in the UK) to the conversation.

I thought I am weird, but after reading this post I feel free from the burden of such thought. Ehehe ))

1. I get goood ideas when manually washing the dishes or doing some other repetetive thing. I guess my mind just spaces out and goes to some other dimension.

2. I walk back and forth around my apartment for an extensive amount of time and after this "walk" I usually get a nice little basket full of ideas. (When I think about it it's kind of similar to point #1, but the dishes remain dirty in the sink)

Cheers guys!

Link to comment
Guest Savanah

Posted

I grab a kombucha, lay out on my hammock and chill. Starring out at the beauty of the world. And ask the universe to enlighten me on what I'm having trouble with. Real talk.
Link to comment
Guest Brian

Posted

I use Google Keep on my phone and on the computer (which get nicely synced instantly) to keep track of everything I think would be useful for a future article or email.

So it's a preventive measure for writer's block that immediately overcomes it because you can look at your bank of things you wanted to write about!

Link to comment
Guest Putting our hardship or challenges into context | It's About Learning

Posted

[…] Source: copywritingcourse.com/writers-block/  […]
Link to comment
Guest Neville

Posted

Hmmmm, using a dog to combat Writer's Block....now THAT'S a new one!
Link to comment
Guest Neville

Posted

Oh good one Yatin! I would say this one is like "Changing Up Your Physical Environment" because it gets your brain out of the monotonous environment you're in and into a more creative and playful state.

It's cool that works well for you :)

Link to comment
Guest Neville

Posted

Hmmm.....it seems you have away more discipline than I do Austin! However you're correct in that just STARTING the damn thing will kick you off in the right direction.

Thanks for sharing.

Link to comment
Guest Neville

Posted

Nice tip Brian! I actually never heard of Google Keep till right now, thanks for teaching me something new :)
Link to comment
Guest Neville

Posted

Oh man, that sounds relaxing. I'd probably just fall asleep :-P
Link to comment
Guest Neville

Posted

Hahaha...washing the dishes! Now THAT is definitely an unconventional method :)

I know what you mean though, repetitive tasks like that (or a shower) for some reason definitely open up creativity.

Thanks for sharing Jacob!

Link to comment
Guest Walid

Posted

I do what men who laugh last do: Laugh with no teeth. (go nuts)

I Call to report: that Captain Caveman Stole my Unicorn Sandwich

Fly an oversized kite then hand it to a complete stranger while crying.

Visiting the boys at the psych wards. . Preferably NOT the one the cops didn't put you in before trial.

Have a serious chat with my dad about his childhood escaping the Israeli Occupation... fatherless, barefoot, 4 year old boy figuring life out on the streets of lebanon. Always ending with what he refers to as being shat out at birth (humouroulsy): Shit Comes out whether you eat or not.

(It does, doesn't it... Yet, i walk away knowing full well he meant Shit Happens. But the way he phrased it, made me realize... (well,

Got back back to writing, no longer feeling shit because the block "it came... and it will come out".

I may come off as incompetent, possibly lost... blame the Captain Caveman. I haven't eaten. But I have Kite to fly.

Good Hunting All

P.S. Whale poop

Link to comment


  • Join 55,000+ people getting our newsletter

    nev-and-logo-going-into-email (3).gif

    - Get notified of new posts -
    - Get weekly S.W.I.P.E.S. Email -
    - Get a free masterclass in copy -
    - People love our emails, see testimonials -

×
×
  • Create New...
Guest