WHAT ARE WRITING ANXIETY AND WRITER’S BLOCK?
“Writing anxiety” and “writer’s block” are informal terms for a wide variety of apprehensive and pessimistic feelings about writing. These feelings may not be pervasive in a person’s writing life. For example, you might feel perfectly fine writing a biology lab report but apprehensive about writing a paper on a novel.You may confidently tackle a paper about the sociology of gender but delete and start over twenty times when composing an email to a cute classmate suggesting coffee. In other words, writing anxiety and writers’ block are situational. These terms do NOT describe psychological attributes. People aren’t born anxious writers; rather, they become anxious or blocked through negative or difficult experiences with writing.
WHEN DO THESE NEGATIVE FEELINGS ARISE?
Although there is a great deal of variation among individuals, there are also some common experiences that writers in general find stressful.
For example, you may struggle when you are:
- adjusting to a new form of writing—for example, first year college writing, papers in a new field of study, or longer forms than you are used to (a long research paper, a senior thesis, a master’s thesis, a dissertation).
- writing for a reader or readers who have been overly critical or demanding in the past.
- remembering negative criticism received in the past—even if the reader who criticized your work won’t be reading your writing this time.
- working with limited time or with a lot of unstructured time.
- responding to an assignment that seems unrelated to academic or life goals.
- dealing with troubling events outside of school.
WHAT ARE SOME STRATEGIES FOR HANDLING THESE FEELINGS?
Get support
Choose a writing buddy, someone you trust to encourage you in your writing life. Your writing buddy might be a friend or family member, a classmate, a teacher, a colleague, or a Writing Center tutor. Talk to your writing buddy about your ideas, your writing process, your worries, and your successes. Share pieces of your writing. Make checking in with your writing buddy a regular part of your schedule. When you share pieces of writing with your buddy, use our handout on asking for feedback.
In his book Understanding Writing Blocks, Keith Hjortshoj describes how isolation can harm writers, particularly students who are working on long projects not connected with coursework. He suggests that in addition to connecting with supportive individuals, such students can benefit from forming or joining a writing group, which functions in much the same way as a writing buddy. A group can provide readers, deadlines, support, praise, and constructive criticism. For help starting one, see our handout about writing groups.
Identify your strengths
Often, writers who are experiencing block or anxiety have a worse opinion of their own writing than anyone else! Make a list of the things you do well. You might ask a friend or colleague to help you generate such a list. Here are some possibilities to get you started:
- I explain things well to people.
- I get people’s interest.
- I have strong opinions.
- I listen well.
- I am critical of what I read.
- I see connections.
Choose at least one strength as your starting point. Instead of saying “I can’t write,” say “I am a writer who can …”
Recognize that writing is a complex process
Writing is an attempt to fix meaning on the page, but you know, and your readers know, that there is always more to be said on a topic. The best writers can do is to contribute what they know and feel about a topic at a particular point in time.
Writers often seek “flow,” which usually entails some sort of breakthrough followed by a beautifully coherent outpouring of knowledge. Flow is both a possibility—most people experience it at some point in their writing lives—and a myth. Inevitably, if you write over a long period of time and for many different situations, you will encounter obstacles. As Hjortshoj explains, obstacles are particularly common during times of transition—transitions to new writing roles or to new kinds of writing.

Think of yourself as an apprentice.
If block or apprehension is new for you, take time to understand the situations you are writing in. In particular, try to figure out what has changed in your writing life. Here are some possibilities:
- You are writing in a new format.
- You are writing longer papers than before.
- You are writing for new audiences.
- You are writing about new subject matter.
- You are turning in writing from different stages of the writing process—for example, planning stages or early drafts.
It makes sense to have trouble when dealing with a situation for the first time. It’s also likely that when you confront these new situations, you will learn and grow. Writing in new situations can be rewarding. Not every format or audience will be right for you, but you won’t know which ones might be right until you try them. Think of new writing situations as apprenticeships. When you’re doing a new kind of writing, learn as much as you can about it, gain as many skills in that area as you can, and when you finish the apprenticeship, decide which of the skills you learned will serve you well later on. You might be surprised.
Below are some suggestions for how to learn about new kinds of writing:
- Ask a lot of questions of people who are more experienced with this kind of writing. Here are some of the questions you might ask: What’s the purpose of this kind of writing? Who’s the audience? What are the most important elements to include? What’s not as important? How do you get started? How do you know when what you’ve written is good enough? How did you learn to write this way?
- Ask a lot of questions of the person who assigned you a piece of writing. If you have a paper, the best place to start is with the written assignment itself. For help with this, see our handout on understanding assignments.
- Look for examples of this kind of writing. (You can ask your instructor if he/she could recommend an example). Look, especially, for variation. There are often many different ways to write within a particular form. Look for ways that feel familiar to you, approaches that you like. You might want to look for published models or, if this seems too intimidating, look at your classmates’ writing. In either case, ask yourself questions about what these writers are doing, and take notes. How does the writer begin and end? In what order does the writer tell things? How and when does the writer convey her or his main point? How does the writer bring in other people’s ideas? What is the writer’s purpose? How does she or he achieve that purpose?
- Read our handouts about how to write in specific fields or how to handle specific writing assignments.
- Listen critically to your readers. Before you dismiss or wholeheartedly accept what they say, try to understand them. If a reader has given you written comments, ask yourself questions to figure out the reader’s experience of your paper: What is this reader looking for? What am I doing that satisfies this reader? In what ways is this reader still unsatisfied? If you can’t answer these questions from the reader’s comments, then talk to the reader, or ask someone else to help you interpret the comments.
- Most importantly, don’t try to do everything at once. Start with reasonable expectations. You can’t write like an expert your first time out. Nobody does! Use the criticism you get.
Once you understand what readers want, you are in a better position to decide what to do with their criticisms. There are two extreme possibilities—dismissing the criticisms and accepting them all—but there is also a lot of middle ground. Figure out which criticisms are consistent with your own purposes, and do the hard work of engaging with them. Again, don’t expect an overnight turn-around; recognize that changing writing habits is a process and that papers are steps in the process.
Chances are that at some point in your writing life you will encounter readers who seem to dislike, disagree with, or miss the point of your work. Figuring out what to do with criticism from such readers is an important part of a writer’s growth.
Try new tactics when you get stuck
Often, writing blocks occur at particular stages of the writing process. The writing process is cyclical and variable. For different writers, the process may include reading, brainstorming, drafting, getting feedback, revising, and editing. These stages do not always happen in this order, and once a writer has been through a particular stage, chances are she or he hasn’t seen the last of that stage. For example, brainstorming may occur all along the way.
Figure out what your writing process looks like and whether there’s a particular stage where you tend to get stuck. Perhaps you love researching and taking notes on what you read, and you have a hard time moving from that work to getting started on your own first draft. Or once you have a draft, it seems set in stone and even though readers are asking you questions and making suggestions, you don’t know how to go back in and change it. Or just the opposite may be true; you revise and revise and don’t want to let the paper go.
Wherever you have trouble, take a longer look at what you do and what you might try. Sometimes what you do is working for you; it’s just a slow and difficult process. Other times, what you do may not be working; these are the times when you can look around for other approaches to try:
- Talk to your writing buddy and to other colleagues about what they do at the particular stage that gets you stuck.
- Read about possible new approaches in our handouts on brainstorming and revising.
- Try thinking of yourself as an apprentice to a stage of the writing process and give different strategies a shot.
- Cut your paper into pieces and tape them to the wall, use eight different colors of highlighters, draw a picture of your paper, read your paper out loud in the voice of your favorite movie star….
Okay, we’re kind of kidding with some of those last few suggestions, but there is no limit to what you can try (for some fun writing strategies, check out our online animated demos). When it comes to conquering a block, give yourself permission to fall flat on your face. Trying and failing will you help you arrive at the thing that works for you.
Celebrate your successes
Start storing up positive experiences with writing. Whatever obstacles you’ve faced, celebrate the occasions when you overcome them. This could be something as simple as getting started, sharing your work with someone besides a teacher, revising a paper for the first time, trying out a new brainstorming strategy, or turning in a paper that has been particularly challenging for you. You define what a success is for you. Keep a log or journal of your writing successes and breakthroughs, how you did it, how you felt. This log can serve as a boost later in your writing life when you face new challenges.
Get support
Wait a minute, didn’t we already say that? Yes. It’s worth repeating. Most people find relief for various kinds of anxieties by getting support from others. Sometimes the best person to help you through a spell of worry is someone who’s done that for you before—a family member, a friend, a mentor. Maybe you don’t even need to talk with this person about writing; maybe you just need to be reminded to believe in yourself, that you can do it.
If you don’t know anyone on campus yet whom you have this kind of relationship with, reach out to someone who seems like they could be a good listener and supportive. There are a number of professional resources for you on campus, people you can talk through your ideas or your worries with. A great place to start is the UNC Writing Center. If you know you have a problem with writing anxiety, make an appointment well before the paper is due. You can come to the Writing Center with a draft or even before you’ve started writing. You can also approach your instructor with questions about your writing assignment. If you’re an undergraduate, your academic advisor and your residence hall advisor are other possible resources. Counselors at Counseling and Wellness Services are also available to talk with you about anxieties and concerns that extend beyond writing.
CONCLUSION
Apprehension about writing is a common condition on college campuses. Because writing is the most common means of sharing our knowledge, we put a lot of pressure on ourselves when we write. This handout has given some suggestions for how to relieve that pressure. Talk with others; realize we’re all learning; take an occasional risk; turn to the people who believe in you. Counter negative experiences by actively creating positive ones.
Even after you have tried all of these strategies and read every Writing Center handout, invariably you will still have negative experiences in your writing life. When you get a paper back with a bad grade on it or when you get a rejection letter from a journal, fend off the negative aspects of that experience. Try not to let them sink in; try not to let your disappointment fester. Instead, jump right back in to some area of the writing process: choose one suggestion the evaluator has made and work on it, or read and discuss the paper with a friend or colleague, or do some writing or revising—on this or any paper—as quickly as possible.
Failures of various kinds are an inevitable part of the writing process. Without them, it would be difficult if not impossible to grow as a writer. Learning often occurs in the wake of a startling event, something that stirs you up, something that makes you wonder. Use your failures to keep moving.
Taken from the University of North Carolina website.
See also this poem !
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How to Deal with Writer's Anxiety and Writer's Block (including video)
University of South Carolina
No matter what you’re writing about, writer’s block can literally
Anxiety is a feeling that I think everybody experience or have experienced in their life, it’s a feeling of worries toward something or about doing something because we don’t know how it’s going to be or going to end, so we overthink about it and get nervous, That’s why many people get writing anxiety because it’s difficult to write down your though so that the reader understand exactly your point of view and feeling, and we have no control over what they are going to think about it, and we can be scare of negative criticism, even if those criticism can help us improve we still don’t want them and can block us when it comes to writing thinking that what we write will not be good enough or negative comment can also be taken personally and block us to write more because nobody like to receive bad critics and can scare us to write more.
ReplyDeleteI personally have been writing some kind of novels since about three years ago and I have experienced this anxiety thing. It actually happens almost all the time. It mostly happens when I don’t have any idea of what I’m going to write to continue the chapter I’ve been working on. Some other writers prefer to take a break for a while and do some relaxing activities such as watching movies, travelling to places they like, or even just smoking cigarettes. However, I think the anxiety itself will always grow to the point that I will feel like I can never write anything again unless I write. So, I think the only way to keep my anxieties away is to keep writing. Maybe try to write something different or just write anything that pop up in your mind. Because by keep on writing, sooner or later your anxiety will slowly disappeared.
ReplyDeleteWriting is something that I truly enjoy doing. When I’m feeling blue, writing is something that I use as a form of escapism. Writing is something that helps me gain closure. I don’t write on diaries about my days or how something occurred because I mainly have a special spot in my heart for poetry. I have always been obsessed with writing poetry and reading them. I think that it is beautiful when someone is expressing their thoughts and feelings through words and metaphors. Usually when I am in the mood to write a poem, I wouldn’t stop writing until pages and pages. But, when writer’s block hits I usually end up not wanting to finish the whole thing. For me, writer’s block usually happen when a writing of mine is turning into something that is way too personal or too raw for people to read so it would make me question my writing which then leads to me overthinking about finishing the rest of the poems. Overthinking usually happens because I am way too scared of what people may think of my writing. When I overthink a lot, I usually end up not knowing what to put on my writing which ends up with me having a writer’s block.
ReplyDeleteI believe that writing anxiety is mainly caused by two main causes: when you write new forms of writing or receive criticism in the past. Even so, I am also sure that the feeling of writing anxiety is inevitable. I also believe that to be able to develop, one needs to know the dynamics that occur in the field they are doing. I do not think it is a problem for someone to feel down when criticized, even if that someone quits from something they are doing. The important thing is people have to realize the deficiency that they receive critics and make solutions to minimize these deficiencies. It does not matter if it takes a lot of time because everyone processes in a different period of time. To overcome anxiety due to having to write a new form of writing, as the article stated, one must try various forms of writing. Assignments given by schools or universities are a medium to develop. But indeed the basis for being able to write is to get used to reading.
ReplyDeleteWriting could be considered as a fun and exciting thing to do because that’s where you could pour out what’s inside of your mind. Except if you see it from a different point of view, like for example you have deadlines and so on, now that’s a different case. But sometimes writing anxiety could be triggered by something that happened from the past or our own anxiety at facing something that we don’t know what the outcome is. Fear that people might criticize your writing because it’s not that great or fear that it might be compared with another person that has better writing is just one of the examples that could get yourself stressed out. So, the solutions that I could offer to overcome this situation is the same solutions that always keeps me going and that is just to ignore their negative comments about your writing and just keep on writing. If you can’t really ignore their comments, then just see them as an obstacle that you need to conquer for yourself.
ReplyDeleteSo in this comment, I’m going to share my story about having anxiety. I’ve experienced this kind of anxiety before, well not just writer’s block but also artist’ block etc.,. When I was younger, I never find difficulties in order to express myself. I used to write a lot of fictions like short stories or drama scenarios, playing music instruments, drawing sketches, or just go hangout with my friends, telling them stories about how’s my life have been going and stuffs like that. I do all of that to express my feelings and my thoughts. But then there’s this thing happened when I was eight grader which ‘destroyed’ my mental health and it’s getting worse when I was eleventh grader. Having these depression and anxiety, slowly, I became ‘numb’. I found it’s hard to do the things that I used to do. I found difficulties turning my thoughts into words, I lost confidence, I lost friends, I lost my passion to draw and even my passion in music.
ReplyDeleteWell, at some point it’s quite nice to become unbothered with my surroundings, but then it’s myself that bothers me, and I think that is the most painful thing from having an anxiety problem : you started to hate yourself. I became a great liar ever since. I lied to myself everyday, saying that I’m okay and I don’t need help from anyone. Trying to escape my problems by depending on medicines and sleep. But then I realized that it was my pride that makes me stuck in that condition. When I try to opened up with people, trying to be not so perfectionist and accepting my flaws, start loving myself with all of my strength and my weaknesses, I started to overcome those anxiety. My mental condition slowly getting better and better. I build up confidence, start to make friends, learn how to be completely honest with myself and just trying to be ‘me’.
ReplyDeleteSometimes I do still having a mental breakdown, and those anxiety came back. I still have that artist’s block right now, but I won’t let myself sank in those sadness and sorrow anymore, I’ll rise and overcome those bad things. I believe that the pain we felt is what makes us who we are right now, so as you can see, I can now express myself by writing such a long comments :) I learned that the key to overcome anxiety is self acceptance and the courage to swallow your pride and seeking for a help (it can be from a psychiatric, your family or your friends). You don’t need to be ashamed if you’re having mental health problems, anxiety for example. Everyone else experienced it and it’s nothing to be ashamed of. If you succeeded to overcome the anxiety you have, I’m sure that the way you see things are going to be different (in a positive way). That’s all, have a good day everyone :)
ReplyDeleteWith November rolling in, comes the season of National Novel Writing Month or also known as NaNoWriMo. As the name suggests, it is the period where aspiring authors and writers spend the entire month of November to write their novel. As someone who loves writing, I’ve always wanted to join in on NaNoWriMo and present my own novel one day but my writing anxiety always gets the best of me and I spend the rest of the year in regret. I think my writing anxiety stems from me being too self-critical, where I focus too much on the little details and the weaknesses of my writing style. Often times, I spend more time editing my work rather than writing and finishing it. Reading this article really comforted me as it provided a lot of helpful solutions and advice for my writing anxiety. I now realize that writing is a complex process and that it’s much more about the journey of expressing yourself and the enjoyment of the act. Although it’s too late for me to join this year’s NaNoWriMo, maybe I’ll try applying this advice next year.
ReplyDelete