Does Your Writing Feel Boring?

Does Your Writing Feel Boring?
Show Notes
Write Your Screenplay Podcast
Hosted by: Jacob Krueger

Do you ever feel disconnected from your writing? A sense that there’s a hidden wall or missing link between what you’re trying to communicate and what’s actually showing up on the page?

Believe it or not, this is a very subtle form of writer’s block. It’s not only impacting your writing, it’s probably also got you beating yourself up and believing you simply don’t have any talent at all. But nothing could be further from the truth!

“Getting a writer writing again is easy. Getting a writer connected again is hard.”
Why is that? Why do you struggle as a writer to share this part of yourself that so desperately desires to be heard? It’s because you learned at a very young age to hide parts of yourself behind masks that kept you safe from being judged, labeled, made fun of, or hurt. These masks taught you to:

Ignore your instincts
Censor yourself and speak only the “acceptable” truths
Avoid any original or disruptive ideas so as not to risk losing approval

“The first step in pulling away a mask is to make it safe enough for the person to start to remove it...to create a world where everything is acceptable, even if we’re writing something normal and boring.”

Writers are their own toughest critics. When you strive for perfection, you’re actually making your job that much harder because you’re judging every word you write. The harsher you are on yourself, the more your creative side will hide behind that mask and the less connection you’ll have to your story. To begin peeling away your mask and reconnecting with your writing, it’s vital you give yourself a safe space to do so by:
Acknowledging you are not your mask
Telling your editing brain to take a break
Accepting everything you write on the page no matter how it sounds

“The art of creativity is not actually about being creative and it’s not about making shit up. The art of creativity is about learning to look, listen, and feel.”
Breaking through this more complex form of writer’s block involves using your senses in a way that gets underneath your writing and helps you find the specificity in each line of dialogue, action, and structure. When you give yourself permission to be curious, to dig deeper, and to openly receive whatever ideas your inner artist shows you, your mask will slowly fall away and you’ll begin to uncover the unexpected in your story and your unique talent as a writer.
If you’d like a full transcript of this podcast or information on our screenwriting classes available in New York City and online as well as any of the other wonderful community events happening at Jacob Krueger Studio, please visit our website at www.writeyourscreenplay.com.

Om Podcasten

Rather than looking at movies in terms of "two thumbs up" or "two thumbs down" Award Winning Screenwriter Jacob Krueger discusses what you can learn from them as a screenwriter. He looks at good movies, bad movies, movies we love, and movies we hate, exploring how they were built, and how you can apply those lessons to your own writing. More information and full archives at WriteYourScreenplay.com