Articles database
 
 
Web AnyArticles.com
Browse by Category:
  Writing and Speaking >
  Subcategories
Book Marketing Book Marketing (211)
Copywriting Copywriting (495)
Public Speaking Public Speaking (405)
Teleseminars Teleseminars (16)
Writing Writing (1220)
Writing Articles Writing Articles (587)


  Categories :
 
  Arts and Entertainment
  Automotive
  Business
  Communications
  Computers and Technology
  Finance
  Food and Drink
  Health and Fitness
  Home and Family
  Home Based Business
  Internet and Businesses Online
  Kids and Teens
  Legal
  News and Society
  Recreation and Sports
  Reference and Education
  Self Improvement
  Shopping and Product Reviews
  Travel and Leisure
  Womens Interests
  Writing and Speaking
  Random Category
  Video Conferencing
  Auctions
  Decorating
Writing article : Beating Perfection Syndrome So You Can Write
 

Writing and Speaking > Writing > Beating Perfection Syndrome So You Can Write

0 Reviews [ add review ], Article rating : 0.00, 0 votes. Author : Angela Booth

It's Saturday afternoon. Your partner has taken the kids to the park. You have a whole hour to write. Instead of which, you sit, staring out the window like Rodin's Thinker in jeans and a yellow sweatshirt. Why aren't you writing? A tiny item called Perfection Syndrome. You want whatever you write in this precious hour to be perfect.

During the week, you had a stream of plausible ideas. You wrote three ideas in your notebook: an article about children's first words (your six month old said 'truck'), an essay about male vanity, and a short story about a blonde with tattooed arms and a poodle.

Just now, none of those ideas seems right. You've only got an hour, so you want the perfect idea, the one that will justify the sixty minutes you're about to spend on it. Instead, you do nothing.

Perfection Syndrome can destroy your writing career. It's a killer, because if you don't recognise it for what it is, it leads to apathy. The gap between what's in your head and what manifests on the page is so wide that you may give up writing for days or weeks.

I understand Perfection Syndrome, because it's something I battle every day. The words on the screen or the page never measure up to the words in my head. I start typing, and after a sentence or two, stop. The words "this is garbage" light up like neon in my skull, my stomach clenches, and I feel as if a ten ton weight had dropped onto my body. It's not as if I'm a new writer. I've been writing for over 20 years. Intellectually, I understand that it's important to get words onto the screen --- any words. You can fix whatever you write. Emotionally, I want the first draft to be perfect. I've accepted that perfectionism is part of my personality, and without a personality transplant, I'm never going to get rid of it, so all I can do is out-write it.

Yes, out-write it. A practice that's helped is Julia Cameron's Morning Pages method, which is detailed in her books: The Artist's Way, and Vein of Gold. The first thing I do each morning is write three pages in longhand. This primes the pump, and if I accomplish the Morning Pages, I know that I can count on a productive writing day, and Perfection Syndrome is beaten for this 24 hours at least.

Updating my inner "writer" image also helped. Images are the language of the right brain and the subconscious mind. Your subconscious mind is the engine which drives you. My initial image of my writing self was of a mountain climber, clinging to vertical rock and ice, unable to see the mountain peak, but terrorized by a crevasse below. No wonder I needed every word to be perfect, if the alternative was death. A more nourishing image popped into my mind. I saw my writing self

as a seed-sower, the old-time kind, with a deep hessian bag of seeds, walking along the furrows of a field of fertile soil, scattering seeds with both hands. Now, whenever I feel panicked about my writing, I visualize myself as the sower, scattering those seeds. Ask yourself what image you hold of yourself as a writer.

=> Strategies to beat Perfection Syndrome

The first step in fighting Perfection Syndrome is to acknowledge that you've got it, and know that it's beatable. Any of the strategies below will help.

* Morning Pages: first thing each morning, write three pages in longhand. The pages don't have to be about anything. You can write three pages of whining about situations in your life, or three pages of "This is stupid, I don't know what to write". Yes, but--- you're thinking: I'm supposed to write three pages no one will ever see, much less publish? YES. Just try the process.

* Check in with your subconscious mind. Just wonder quietly about the image you hold of your writing self. Either awake, while daydreaming, or in a dream, and image will float into your mind. If it's negative, change it to a life-affirming, encouraging and hopeful one.

* Set a target number of words for each writing session. However, set the word target and quality LOW. Even on your worst migraine day you can write 200 words of gibberish. Or, promise yourself that whenever you turn on your computer, you will write 50 words on your current project.

* Keep a writing log for each writing session for a week. List what you worked on, how many words you wrote, and how you felt before you started writing and how you felt when you finished. Your writing log will convince you that writing can alter your moods: you'll feel better when you finish your writing session than you did before you started. It will also convince you that you can write when you're depressed, tired, or ill.

* Start a story prompts/ ideas file. A fresh idea may tempt you if you're resisting working on your current projects.

* Where else in your life do you expect perfection? If you're struck with Perfection Syndrome, it will manifest in other areas. List five of those areas, and several ways to combat each

* Perfectionism leads to procrastination: do one task each day that you've been putting off. Be willing to skimp on the task, and do it badly, but do it.

Turn words into money! Subscribe to copywriter and author Angela Booth's new free ezine, Write For Cash. Discover how to turn your own words, or someone else's into money. The new Web boom is upon us, so content has never been more important, or more valuable. Each issue contains a strategy and a product: information you can use immediately. If you want to build a global business from the comfort of your easy chair, subscribe today.



0 Reviews [ add review ], Article rating : 0.00, 0 votes. Author : Angela Booth
Rate this story : and read/post review(s)


Article reviews



Post your review
[ Note : no HTML/URLs - will removed automatically ]
Your name
Your comments


More articles from Writing and Speaking > Writing

Add article | Manage Articles | Top Rated articles | Most Reviewed articles | Contact us | Links