On Writer's Block Quotes
On Writer's Block
by
Victoria Nelson158 ratings, 4.04 average rating, 25 reviews
On Writer's Block Quotes
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“As a rule, young children don't complain of wanting to fingerpaint but finding themselves mysteriously unable to do so.”
― On Writer's Block
― On Writer's Block
“What is creativity? Above all, it is play, the child's fresh spontaneity waiting to come forth in writing, or painting, or composing music, or any creative act.”
― On Writer's Block
― On Writer's Block
“A novel is something that stands at the end of a lengthy process called writing. It is not a preexisting Platonic form embedded within the writer... I do not have a Boston marathon inside me waiting to get out. The marathon is a peak experience I am rightly entitled to only as the culmination of years of regular training and love of running.”
― On Writer's Block
― On Writer's Block
“Se cuenta que una vez el viento y el sol hicieron una apuesta. Se desafiaron a ver quién sería el primero en conseguir que un hombre se quitara su capote. El viento sopló con furia, pero el hombre se ajustó más la capa. Cuando brilló el sol, se la quitó feliz.”
― On Writer's Block
― On Writer's Block
“Many people find it difficult to head straight for their fun; something in them refuses to play. The barrier is not lack of willpower (did you ever need willpower, as a child, to make mud pies?), but a stronger and much more seductive emotion: hatred. Specifically, hatred of self.
Loving oneself—as opposed to the narcissism of being
in love with oneself, with all its attendant insecurities—is one of the most difficult life tasks to master, and it is integrally related to the creative process.”
― On Writer's Block
Loving oneself—as opposed to the narcissism of being
in love with oneself, with all its attendant insecurities—is one of the most difficult life tasks to master, and it is integrally related to the creative process.”
― On Writer's Block
“When you experience writer's block, it means your creative child is throwing herself on the floor and refusing to cooperate. What do you do under these circumstances? Do you try to compel your child, kicking and screaming, to do what she would not? Do you send her to her room without dinner? Do you give her a number of logical reasons why she ought to
cooperate? Or do you try to find out why she doesn't want to in the first place?”
― On Writer's Block
cooperate? Or do you try to find out why she doesn't want to in the first place?”
― On Writer's Block
