The endless search for inspiration

Finding inspiration in a storm

Finding inspiration in a storm

I have been writing my first novel for what feels like forever. In actual fact, I smashed out 40,000 words in a few months, my tongue between my teeth and my stomach buzzing with excitement. This is happening, I kept thinking to myself. And then all of a sudden, I reached the middle and drew a complete blank. An absolute, stop where you are, blank. That was 6 months ago and I haven’t written since.

I often describe writing at the moment like wading through mud. Every word is a struggle. No matter what I do, I cannot, for the life of me, think of any way to continue the story. It’s like staring into a haze, where the characters don’t really know what they’re doing or who they are. And do I even care?

I’ve read here and there (when tirelessly Googling ‘how to combat writers block’) to put the story down and let it sit. Forget about it even. Supposedly, when I open up my 100-page word document again, it will all come flooding back to me and I will have a renewed sense of motivation and my mind will be teeming with ideas and inspiration.

Like I said, I stopped writing 6 months ago…so things weren’t looking good. I’ve opened that document, read the last chapter, and closed it again.

I recently found, whilst driving home from work, the beginnings of inspiration stir within me. It was windy and the sky was darkening with an oncoming storm. I slipped into a daze as a slow and melodic song came on the radio. Leaves began to fall from the overhead trees and batter my windscreen and before my eyes, my characters manifested. As drizzling rain blurred my vision, I imagined them standing in an open field, wondering about the dangerous future ahead of them. I could see their faces, their creased foreheads from anguish.

Then I turned onto the highway into heavy traffic and the image melted.

Maybe all I needed was a storm after all.

3 thoughts on “The endless search for inspiration

  1. Missy Harding says:
    Missy Harding's avatar

    I’d start a new document, keeping what you have already written in mind and start a new story from were you left off. You can then join them together once you get writing again, because I think once you do start writing it will all come back to you and you’ll be on your way again.

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  2. ames687 says:
    ames687's avatar

    Funnily enough, I attempted that recently. I started a new chapter and continued the story but with a completely different setting, time frame (etc.) in mind. I wrote 3 pages but the story lulled again. I am lacking a strong twist. How do writers come up with original ideas these days?

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