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Main Page –› Self Help –› Creativity Techniques
 

Creative Blocks: How to Get Unstuck!

 
Author: Claudie Plen

I have something a little embarrassing to admit. Over the past few days I seem to have developed a bit of a creative block. Ive been making cups of tea, hoovering the rug, even doing my filing, anything really to avoid the inevitable, that I have to sit down and write. So, jumping swiftly past the obvious and amusing irony of the situation (me being a creativity coach and all), its got me thinking about where these blocks come from, and what I or you can do when they occur.

Things I do which make the block bigger and scarier

1. Watching TV: however much I love reruns of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, they numb my mind, and stop me thinking. Bliss for a while, but ultimately unproductive. Turn it off. Now.
2. Being self-critical: critical of the work itself, then critical of myself for being blocked. Be nice, and give yourself a break. And some chocolate if necessary. If youre going to be blocked, at least be self-supporting about it.
3. Filing, cleaning, rearranging the furniture: all useful, but itll just get later and later, and trying to move the sofa by yourself will only result in (at best) frustration and (at worst) serious injury to self and home furnishings. It looks better where it is, put it down and walk away.

Things I do which work

1. Doing something else: creativity thrives on stimulus, and giving your mind a break from the problem in hand can provide new perspectives when you are least expecting them. Go for a walk, look at the trees and the sky, or wander round a toyshop. Anything with new colours, sights and sounds will prompt new thoughts to flow.
2. Cross-pollination: when I have trouble writing, I go and draw instead, trouble with a painting, I try writing about it. Sometimes I cook, or dance around the living room. One form of creativity can inform another and increase the flow of ideas.
3. Clearing space: In The artists way Julia Cameron advises writing morning pages, essentially 3 pages of long hand writing every morning. In my experience this is one of the simplest and most effective ways to avoid any kind of creative block. The discipline of writing, even when the three pages may be filled with your shopping list or endless lines of I cant think what to write gets your mind used to filling space. If you can fill space, eventually some rather interesting ideas tend to surface. It also allows you to empty your mind onto the paper, letting all those annoying nagging thoughts, worries and ephemera flow out onto the page. What will be left is clear space in which to get back to the job in hand, being creative.
4. Talking about it: new perspectives from another person (even if and sometimes especially if you disagree with them) can shift a block quicker than you would imagine. The process of explaining the problem will often act as a catalyst for the solution, youll suddenly see where the next step lies. Talk about something else if you like, youll still be surprised at what occurs to you mid-sentence.

Most important of all though is to DO SOMETHING! Anything will do, as long as its proactive (even if not necessarily relevant to the task in hand). Sometimes when you cant explode a block, you may just find the nearest convenient route around it, and looking back, it may not seem so big after all

Author Bio:
Claudie Plen is a eminent columnist. Claudie likes to write articles about this subject.
You can search for this article using: increase creativity, creativity, creativity exercises, greater creativity, creativity innovation
 
 
 

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