Rehab for writing injuries
Youβve heard ofΒ βmaking writing a habit,β and youβve tried, but the pressure to write fills you with horrible pain and dread. You spend all your time wishing you could write but somehow never writing.Β The βmake it a habitβ approach doesnβt work for you. But you stillΒ want to write, maybe even regularly. Is there nothing you can do?
Here is an alternative approach to try. A rehab program, as it were, for writers with a psychologicalΒ βwriting injuryβ that has destroyed their desire to write and replaced it with shame, anxiety and dread.
If you have a writing injury, you probably acquired it by being cruel to yourself, by internalizing some intensely critical voice or set of rules that crushes your will to write under the boot-heel of βyou should.βΒ βYou should be writing better after all the years of experience youβve had.βΒ βYou should be writing more hours a day, youβll never get published at this rate.βΒ βYou should write more like [Hilton Als/Jeffrey Eugenides/Octavia Butler/Terry Pratchett/etc.].βΒ βYou should write faster/more/better/etc./etc.β
You know what, though? Fuck all that. Self-abuse may have featured heavily in the cool twentieth-century writerβs lifestyle, but we are going to treat ourselves differently. Because 1) itβs nicer, and 2) frankly, it gets better results. My plan here is to help you take the radical step of caring for yourself.
1) First of all: ask yourself why you arenβt writing.Β
Not with the goal of fixing the problem, butβ¦just to understand. For a moment, dial down all of theΒ βgoddammit, why canβt I just write?β blaringΒ in your head and be curious about yourself. Clearly, you have a reason for not writing. Humans donβt do anything for no reason. Try to discover what it is. And be compassionate; donβt reject anything you discover as βnot a good enough excuse.β Your reasons are your reasons.
For me, writing was painful because I wanted it to solve all my problems. I wanted it to make me happy and whole. I hated myself and hoped writing would transform me into a totally different person. When it failed to do that, as it always did, I felt like shit.
Maybe writing hurts because youβve loaded it with similarly unfair expectations. Or maybe youβre a victim of low expectations. Maybe people have told you youβre stupid or untalented or not fluent enough in the language you write in. Maybe writing has become associated with painful events in your life. Maybe youβve just been forced to write so many times that you can no longer write without feeling like someoneβs making you do it. Writing-related pain and anxiety can come from so many different places.
2) Once you have some idea ofΒ why youβre not writingβ¦just sit with that.
Donβt go into problem-solving mode. Just nod to yourself and say,Β βyes, thatβs a good reason. If I were me, I wouldnβt want to write either.β Have some sympathy for yourself and the pain youβre in.
3) Nowβ¦keep sitting with it. Thatβs it, for the moment. No clever solutions. Just sympathize.Β And, most importantly, grant yourself permission to not write,Β for a while.
Itβs okay.Β You are good and valuable and worthy of love, even when you arenβt writing. There are still beautiful, true things inside of you.
Hereβs the thing: itβs very hard for humans to do things if they donβt have permission notΒ to do them. Itβs especially hard if those things are also painful. We hate feeling trapped or compelled, and we hate having our feelings disregarded. It shuts us down in every possible way. You will feel more desire to write, therefore, if you believe you are free not to write, and if you believe itβs okay not to do what causes you pain.
(By the way: not having permissionΒ isnβt the same as knowing there will be negative consequences.Β βIf I donβt write, I wonβt make my deadlineβ is different fromΒ βIβm not allowed not to write, even ifΒ it hurts.β One is just awareness of cause and effect; the other is a kind of slavery.)
4) For at least a week, take an enforced vacation from writing, and from any demands that you write. During this time, you are not permitted to write or give yourself grief for not writing.Β
This may or may not be reverse psychology. But itβs more than that.
Think of it as a period of convalescence. Youβre keeping your weight off an injury so it can heal, and whatβs broken is your desire to write. PitilesslyΒ forcing yourself to write when itβs painful, plus the shame you feel when you donβt write, is what broke that desire. So, for a week (or a month, or a year, or however long you need) tell yourself you are taking a doctor-prescribed break from writing.
This will feel scary for some folks. You might feel like youβre giving up. You might worry that this break from writing feels too good,Β that your desire to write might never return. All I can say is, Iβve been there. Iβve had all those fears and feelings. And the desire to write didΒ return. But you gotta treat it like a tiny crocus shoot and not stomp on it the second it pokes its little head up. Like so:
5) Once you feel an itch to write againβonce you start to chafe against the doctorβs ordersβyou can write a tiny bit. Only five or ten minutes a day.Β
Thatβs it. Iβm serious: set a timer, and stop writing when the timeβs up. No cheating. (Wellβ¦maybe you can take an extra minute to finish your thought, if necessary.)
Remember: these rules are not like the old rules, the ones that said, βyou must write or you suck.β These rules areΒ a form of self-care. You are not imposing a cruel, arbitrary law, you are beingΒ gentle with yourself. NotΒ βeasyβ orΒ βsoftββany Olympic athlete will tell you that hard exercise when youβve got an injury is stupid and pointless, not tough or virtuous. If you need an excuse to take care of yourself, thatβs it: if youβre injured, you canβt perform well, and aggravating the injury could take you out of the competition permanently.
For the first few days, all of the writing you do should be freewriting. Later, you can do some tiny writing exercises. Donβt jump into an old project you stalled out on. Think small and exploratory, not big and goal-oriented. And whatever you do, donβt judge the output. If you have to, donβt even read what you write. This is exercise, not performance; this is you stretching your atrophied writing muscles, not you trying to write something good. At this stage, it literally doesnβt matter what you write, as long as you generate words. (Frankly, it would be kind of weird and unfair if your writing at this point was good.)
6) After a week, you can increase your time limit if you want. But only a little!Β
Spend a week limiting yourself to, say, twenty minutes a day instead of ten. When in doubt, set your limit for less than you think youβll need.Β You want to end each writing session feeling like you could keep going, not like youβre crawling across the finish line.
Should you write every day? Thatβs up to you. Some people will find it helpful to put writing on their calendar at the same time each day. Others will be horribly stifled by that. You get to decide when and how often you write, but two things: 1) think about what you, personally, need when you make that decision, and 2) allow that decision to be flexible.
Remember, the only rule is, donβt go over your daily limit. You always have permission to writeΒ less.
And keep checking in with yourself. Remember how this program began? If something hurts, if your brain is sending youΒ βI donβt wannaβ signals, respect them. Investigate them, find out what their deal is. You might decide to (gently) encourage yourself to write in spite of them, but donβt ignore your pain. You are an athlete, and athletes listen to their bodies, especially when theyβre recovering from an injury. If writing feels shitty one day, give yourself a reward for doing it. If working on a particular project ties your brain in knots, do a little freewriting to loosen up. And always be willing to take a break. You always have permission not to write.
7) Slowly increase your limit over time, but always have a limit.Β
And when youβre not writing, youβre not writing.Β You donβt get to berate yourself for not writing. If you find yourself regularly blazing past your limit, then increase your limit, but donβt set large aspirational limits in an effort to make yourself write more. In fact, be ready to adjust your limit lower.
When it comes to mental labor, after all, more is not always better.Β Apparently, the average human brain can only concentrate for about 45 minutes at a time, and it only has about four or so high-quality 45-minute sessions a day in it. Thatβs three hours. So if you set your daily limit for more than three hours, you may be working at reduced efficiency, when youβd be better off saving up your ideas and motivation for the next day. (Plus, health and other factors may in fact give you less than 3 good hours a day. Thatβs okay!)
Of course, if youβre a professional writer or a student, external pressures may force you to write when your brain is tired, but my point is more about attitude: constant work is not necessarily better work. So donβt make it into a moral ideal. We tend to think that working less is morally weak or wrong, and thatβs bullshit. Taking care of yourself is practical. Pushing yourself too hard will just hurt you and your writing. Also, your feelings are real and they matter. If you ignore or abuse them, youβll be like a runner trying to run on a broken ankle.
I know Iβm going to get someone who says, βif youβre a pro, sometimes you gotta ignore your feelings and just get the work done!βΒ
You can, of course, choose to work in spite of any pain youβre feeling. ButΒ ignore that pain at your peril. Instead, acknowledge the pain and be compassionate. Forgive yourself if pain slows you down. You are human, so donβt hold your feet to the fire for having human limitations. Maybe a deadline is forcing you to work anyway. But make yourself a cup of hot chocolate to get you through it, literally or metaphorically. Help yourself, donβt force yourself. If youβve had a serious writing injury, that shift in attitude will make all the difference.Β
In short: treat yourself as someone whose feelings matter.
Try it out! And let me know how it goes!
Ask a question or send me feedback!