Approaching the blank page - part 1
From Write Anything - 26 July 09
This article first appeared on the Write Anything website on July 26, 2009. The original text can be found here. This is the first in a four-part guide I wrote describing how I get past my own writer's block - it would be hubristic of me to claim that this will solve the problem for everyone, but perhaps it will provide some writers with inspiration for finding their own way through the blank page.
Approaching the blank page - part 1
This is it. This is the moment. You are a writer. You want to write. You sit down, open up your notebook, fire up the word processor, put a sheet of paper into the typewriter, sharpen that pencil, dip pen into ink, your fingers hovering over the keys - however you write, you're about to begin, and you're about to begin on a blank page.
And that's when you stop. You are on the precipice here, peering over the edge into the void, a little scared, and wondering what you are supposed to be doing now.
The blank page is terrifying. It is pristine, pure - do you really want to defile it with poor spelling and grammar, cliché and redundancy? It is also potential - this could be a shopping list, or it could be a book that changes the world forever. And you won't know until you write.
So how do you start? Well, that greatly depends on how you answer the following question...
Do you know what you want to write about?
If you do, then there are all kinds of techniques, tricks and tools you can use - and they are for another day. Right now, I want to speak to all of you people at the back of the room, trying hard not to make eye contact, looking a little sheepish and who gave an embarrassed, mumbled "no" in answer.
If you don't know what you want to write about, then the blank page is the scariest thing you'll see. Because you don't feel its potential, instead it seems to mock you.
So, in this situation, when you don't know what to write about, how do you approach the blank page?
You don't. You back away from the blank page.
Counterintuitive, yes, but if you don't have anything to say, then you need to find something to say, and you won't find it by staring at a piece of paper and cursing your inability to fill it with squiggles and words. You can't see the wood for the trees, and in this case you can't see your story for the pulped tree staring back at you.
If you don't know what to write about, then you are not just lacking in inspiration, you are lacking in ideas. This is nothing to be ashamed about, it happens to every writer. The solution is to go hunting for ideas. The best writing connects to the reader, it is visceral, it grabs them and speaks to them intimately.
So your ideas have to have that same power. You won't get them sitting alone straining to fill up a page. If you are lacking in ideas, then take a break from writing.
Go read. Watch television, or a movie. Call on old friend and have a chat. Talk a walk around town, and observe people. And I mean really observe them, wonder about their lives, their jobs, how they are feeling, what they are up to. Walk in nature and listen to birdsong, watch insects buzzing from flower to flower. Read a newspaper and catch up on world affairs.
This is where your ideas come from - from the vast theatre of life, the ongoing drama that is the human experience. Some of my best writing and ideas have come from random news stories, snatches of conversation, and observing people and asking "what if".
A news report on declining bee populations led to an apocalyptic short story of a world without bees. My daily commute to work led to a short horror story in the London Underground. A holiday in New England gave me the location and character inspirations for a novel.
It's all out there, and it's yours for the taking, so go and soak it all up. Take as much time as you need, and once you've got an idea, or two, or three, or four hundred, come back to that blank page.
Then we'll think about how to start.
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