Break writer's block with one true sentence

Break writer's block with one true sentence

Ernest Hemingway is one of my favorite writers. He's surely influenced my sparse style. If it doesn't move the story along ... get rid of it! He also offered me a fool-proof method to break writer's block.

I recently re-read A Moveable Feast.? a fascinating account of his early years in Paris and beyond. It re-introduced me to one of the all-time best quotes about creating content, and I wanted to share it with you. Hemingway writes about his sure-fire way of breaking through writer's block:

So finally I would write one true sentence, and then go on from there. It was easy then because there was always one true sentence that I knew or had seen or had heard someone say. If I started to write elaborately, or like someone introducing or presenting something, I found that I could cut that scrollwork or ornament out and throw it away and start with the first true simple declarative sentence I had written. Up in that room I decided that I would write one story about each thing that I knew about. I was trying to do this all the time I was writing, and it was good and severe discipline.

I like this idea because everyone should be able to name at least one true sentence, right?

The way this works for me is simple. There is so much that is untrue on the internet, and specifically in the marketing world. Many of my blog posts come from thinking, "That is just not right. Here is what is true to me."

Often, I'll just write down a bare idea as a headline in WordPress to be considered later. If you look at the recent videos I've published on YouTube, they all emanate from just saying something true to me on that day.

Just do it.

Matt Bell suggests not over-thinking the creative process. Don't even do a draft. Let the draft come organically:

What I’ve found is that overplanning before beginning writing risks blocking opportunities for discovery and surprise. Rather than dutifully following an outline, I want to be guided by what appears on the page as I write, by the emerging desires of characters and the dramatic demands of drafted scenes as well as by the acoustics of my sentences and the possibilities of the narrator’s voice.

I’m not the only writer who proceeds in this way. Of his own drafts, Robert Boswell writes, “I come to know my stories by writing my way into them ... It would feel dutiful instead of exciting.”

My approach

I have a hybrid approach. I often start blog posts with "one true sentence," but when it comes to a book, I definitely need an outline to guide me. I don't have the luxury of being a professional writer with loads of time to let a book work itself into being. I'm a busy guy and start with at least a roadmap of where I'm going.

Still, even with the most complicated of projects, I just let it flow. I write and write and write and then go back later to make it flow in a beautiful way.

One true sentence. It helped break writer's block for Hemingway in 1964. It works for me, and it can work for you.

I appreciate you and the time you took out of your day to read this! You can find more articles like this from me on the top-rated {grow} blog and while you’re there, take a look at my Marketing Companion podcast and my keynote speaking page. For news and insights find me on Twitter at @markwschaefer, to see what I do when I’m not working, follow me on Instagram, and discover my RISE community here.

Yes Mark. Let those words flow. Don’t think about introductions conclusions, inversed pyramids or any other of those 17 Tips to become a great writer. You can always do that later on!

Dionne Mallens

Business Owners | Technical Sales Leaders - Find & Sell to Your Ideal Clients More Easily & Often | Outsourced Business Development Team | Sales Revenue Growth | Renegade RevOps Show | Ex-Detective in Business????♀?

1 年

I’ve started to take this kind of approach with my own writing now. It makes a big difference to me. Good read!

Tim Peter

Digital Strategy Expert @ Tim Peter & Associates | Revenue Growth, Digital Marketing, Hospitality Marketing, and Artificial Intelligence

1 年

Great recommendation, Mark. Not that I’m surprised. ??

Alfred Borg

Creative Director, Scriptwriting, Storyboarding, Directing, Designing.

1 年

We are not connected on LinkedIn. However, the article in the Medium Daily digest that I received is absolutely brilliant regarding the platform you know what I mean. I believe that Silicon Valley's AI and media have a negative impact and act as an obstacle to society. It's like a dog chasing its tail, with only a few individuals benefiting from it. The accumulation of wealth by the top one percent does not contribute to the progress of others. Congratulations on your achievement.

Lisa O'Donnell Fahoury, CBC ??

Content marketing pro by day || Plotting to win the Pillsbury BakeOff by night

1 年

Feel better soon!

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