My Scribe Web | Writing Information My Scribe Web | Writing Information
Resources For Writers | Web Builders | Publishers | Online Business

The Psychology Of Effortless Writing

Place your ad here

I love writing. I love the swirl and swing of words as they tangle with human emotions. ~James Michener

Writing has always been a highly pleasurable form of art for me. I find it surprising that many people view it as something to avoid as much as possible. The most baffling thing to me is how people complain of "writer's block." I've also heard of metaphors like "squeezing blood from a stone."

Not only is it a delicious experience to read and to write, but it's really easy. After all, it's talking and expressing your view of the world. Sometimes your views, like that of Nelson Mandela's, can even change the course of history.

Through writing I can convey my entire experience so that someone else can benefit from it and learn from that experience without having had to be there. So, by writing I can give others much more than I can in person. In addition, writing bends time and I can convey my experience to someone centuries away.

Anyway my point is not to wax eloquent on the joy and gift of self-expression. Rather it is to demonstrate how easy it is to write quickly and with delight.

Here are five simple things that you can do to make your writing effortless.

1. Read. Enjoy your favorite book, luxuriate in the imagery, and allow yourself to drift into someone else's experience of the world. When you read, your brain starts to warm up. It starts to hum and sing. It discovers the pleasure of its own function.

2. Write. After getting inspired by the writings of others, it's time to cut your own piece of the pie. Sit down and write. Let the words flow; fall into a reverie; and go swimming in the river of your own cogitations.

3. Edit. Go over what you've written. Cut out extra words and tighten sentences and rearrange paragraphs. Make it a game. Play with the idea of how you can make it shorter, simpler, or more expressive.

4. Proof. Read over what you've written. See if there are any typos or spelling mistakes. See if there are any grammatical errors or awkward sentences. Prune, correct, and shear.

5. Publish. Get it out there. Do a blog. Post a letter. Gather it into a volume and pack it off to a publishing house or post it as an e-book.

Finally, bless the work and let it go. Don't be attached to the outcome. Your pleasure was in writing. You can't do anything about how others respond or fail to respond.

Writing can be a chore only if you set about it the wrong way.

Here are five ways that people like to turn pleasure into pain:

1. When you confuse the inner editor with the inner writer, you feel confused and pained and blocked. First, let the writer show up. Then, the editor can do its thing. Keep both functions separate.

2. When you write under pressure, with no sense of beauty, and with no sense of magic within. This is easily cured by reading a good book. Let the flow of language carry you. Your subconscious will then be attuned to replicating the beauty.

3. When you spend hours editing, trying to get it perfect, and upsetting yourself because it's impossible to read it through and not make a correction. Words are plastic and they can always be molded better, and each time you read you can see more to shape. Hence, just edit it once and let it go.

4. When you cling to the outcome. When your work is not published and you feel rejected. When it is read by "friends" who make comments that have nothing to do with what you wrote. When you expect something for your efforts and nothing comes back to you. After you write and send it out, let it go.

5. And when you're unclear on an idea and it never comes out right. You can't get it right because your thoughts are all jumbled up. In this case, outline or wait for inspiration.

In conclusion, write. It will do your soul a world of good.

Resource Box

Saleem Rana got his Masters degree in psychotherapy from California Lutheran University. His articles on the internet have inspired over ten thousand people from around the world. Discover how to create a remarkable life

Copyright 2004 Saleem Rana. Please feel free to pass thisarticle on to your friends, or use it in your ezine ornewsletter. It's a shareware article.


MORE RESOURCES:

WBFS

FCAT writing fiasco
MiamiHerald.com
But on Tuesday, Florida got a preview of the crisis to come when the state Board of Education held an emergency meeting by phone to lower the bar on the FCAT writing test after plunging results essentially flunked 73 percent of fourth graders on the ...
Numbers GameHuffington Post (blog)
Lyons: Scoring for FCAT writing test misses markSarasota Herald-Tribune
Florida lowers passing grade for state writing examUSA TODAY
Sun-Sentinel -St. Augustine Record -Dothan First
all 284 news articles »


Writing's on the wall for McNabb
ESPN
By Ashley Fox | ESPN.com There is one franchise that would seem to be a perfect fit for Donovan McNabb, a place where he knows the system, the personnel, the expectations and the playbook, and he wouldn't have to mentor anybody.

and more »


Writers on a New England Stage welcomes America's laureate of real life, Anna ...
Foster's Daily Democrat
PORTSMOUTH — Writers on a New England Stage, the celebrated author series presented by The Music Hall and New Hampshire Public Radio, welcomes Anna Quindlen, on Wednesday, May 23. Ms. Quindlen, a #1 New York Times bestselling author, Pulitzer Prize ...

and more »


Lisa Rinna on writing a book about sex
CNN
"The Big Fun Sexy Sex Book" is a fun and innovative guide to rejuvenating your sex life and libido, co-written with renowned sex therapist Ian Kerner (who writes about sex on CNN's medical news blog, The Chart). The vivacious 48-year-old actress is ...

and more »


ABC News (blog)

Mexican Writer Carlos Fuentes Dies at 83
Wall Street Journal (blog)
By Jose de Cordoba MEXICO CITY – Carlos Fuentes, Mexico's most famous writer, and a world-known public intellectual, died Tuesday, depriving the nation of its most internationally recognized voice. Mr. Fuentes, a novelist, poet, diplomat, critic, ...
In Writing, Fuentes Shed Light On Poverty, InequalityNPR
Carlos Fuentes, Mexican Novelist Who Inspired Latin American Writing, DiesABC News (blog)
Mexican author Carlos Fuentes diesABC Online
Los Angeles Times -Reuters -San Francisco Chronicle
all 941 news articles »


U.S. News & World Report (blog)

No Joke: George W. Bush Writing a Book on Economic Growth
U.S. News & World Report (blog)
To wit: Former President George W. Bush is writing a book on—wait for it—strategies for economic growth. The Center for American Progress's Pat Garofalo caught this little tidbit and nicely summarized why the idea of Bush writing a book on economic ...

and more »


'Suburgatory' Creator on Writing a Finale That Guaranteed a Series Renewal
Hollywood Reporter
"I really wanted to create a lot of little loose threads so that there was no way they couldn't pick us up,” Emily Kapnek says. Going into Wednesday's Suburgatory finale, series creator Emily Kapnek wanted to make it very hard for ABC to deny the show ...

and more »


Bloomberg (blog)

Why Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg Returned to Writing Code
Bloomberg (blog)
Mark Zuckerberg has returned to writing code after a six-year hiatus from programming, a fact revealed in Bloomberg Businessweek's story today on how the Facebook founder hacked the world of Silicon Valley. Like many young entrepreneurs, Zuckerberg had ...

and more »


Short story writer takes home Sophie Kerr Award
The Star Democrat
Manion, an English major from Clarksville, took the prize with her submission of four short stories she considers to be works in progress, and excerpts of her thesis on the role of letter writing in literature a study that drew from the novels of Jane ...

and more »


PerezHilton.com

Aaron Sorkin hates the Internet. Why does he keep writing about tech geniuses?
Entertainment Weekly
But even though Sorkin snagged an Oscar for writing about the technorati, it's still deeply weird that he somehow became Hollywood's go-to tech biopic scribe. Sorkin has long had a love-hate relationship with computers — accent on the hate.
Aaron Sorkin Is Writing ANOTHER Steve Jobs BiopicPerezHilton.com

all 52 news articles »

Google News

home | site map |My Scribe Web | PrivacyPolicy | Contact Us
© 2009 Katarina Jellinek