C.L Castle
New Member
My first thread to you all is asking for advice. Hah. I hope it's in the right place; I wasn't sure where to put it.
For context I'm a ghostwriter. We are usually expected to produce a book very quickly, like a month and a half. But there is some time for me that passes between projects. Usually a month is for editing and revising, and then the prep for the next project takes around another month.
Recently a friend of mine suggested I may have creative burnout.
Years ago, pre-ghostwriting profession, I could write a 90k book on a dream alone. I was a total pantser. Never planned my stories, I waited for them to come to me.
Then along came another friend who critiqued my stuff so harshly I started second guessing everything. That turned me into a planner, and ghostwriting exaggerated the planning side because now the ideas weren't mine at all.
With those early books of mine, the ideas took a long time to germinate and come to fruition. Months. Years. And I took long spells off between writing them. But they flowed like a river.
Now I'm having to stick to someone else's outline, and a deadline. For some of the outlines, that doesn't matter. Some of the story scenes I can "see" clearly in my mindseye.
But for most of it, I suddenly now have to write 3000 word chapters that are planning alone. Including what topics need to be discussed in dialogue. The story doesn't live, it's constructed, and there's little spontaneity.
My friend suggested I rest as much as I can now over the festive season and (welp) but my own projects aside for now.
There's one problem, though. I'm not quite sure what she means with rest, and neither is she.
Because while I can put my writing aside, grudgingly, READING fiction is like crack to me. I read A TON. You wouldn't think it, if you see how I struggle for ideas, but it's true.
Reading and writing is what I've been doing for 99% of the last two years.
For the past two days I haven't read much, following her advice to do something completely different to what I usually do. And I feel a kind of depression now. I have other hobbies: coloring, yoga, cycling, puzzles. None of them provide the kind of happy boost reading stories does.
And I've been getting tension headaches. It's like me trying to release my brain to just zone out without thinking is stressing it out even more, maybe like a marathon runner who finally came to a standstill and can barely move a muscle.
Finally, we come to the question I want to ask.
TL
R:
Can I still read fiction while in "recovery" for creative burnout? Like... I don't know, four hours a day or so, since I'm on vacay?
(Please don't take away my books!)
For context I'm a ghostwriter. We are usually expected to produce a book very quickly, like a month and a half. But there is some time for me that passes between projects. Usually a month is for editing and revising, and then the prep for the next project takes around another month.
Recently a friend of mine suggested I may have creative burnout.
Years ago, pre-ghostwriting profession, I could write a 90k book on a dream alone. I was a total pantser. Never planned my stories, I waited for them to come to me.
Then along came another friend who critiqued my stuff so harshly I started second guessing everything. That turned me into a planner, and ghostwriting exaggerated the planning side because now the ideas weren't mine at all.
With those early books of mine, the ideas took a long time to germinate and come to fruition. Months. Years. And I took long spells off between writing them. But they flowed like a river.
Now I'm having to stick to someone else's outline, and a deadline. For some of the outlines, that doesn't matter. Some of the story scenes I can "see" clearly in my mindseye.
But for most of it, I suddenly now have to write 3000 word chapters that are planning alone. Including what topics need to be discussed in dialogue. The story doesn't live, it's constructed, and there's little spontaneity.
My friend suggested I rest as much as I can now over the festive season and (welp) but my own projects aside for now.
There's one problem, though. I'm not quite sure what she means with rest, and neither is she.
Because while I can put my writing aside, grudgingly, READING fiction is like crack to me. I read A TON. You wouldn't think it, if you see how I struggle for ideas, but it's true.
Reading and writing is what I've been doing for 99% of the last two years.
For the past two days I haven't read much, following her advice to do something completely different to what I usually do. And I feel a kind of depression now. I have other hobbies: coloring, yoga, cycling, puzzles. None of them provide the kind of happy boost reading stories does.
And I've been getting tension headaches. It's like me trying to release my brain to just zone out without thinking is stressing it out even more, maybe like a marathon runner who finally came to a standstill and can barely move a muscle.
Finally, we come to the question I want to ask.
TL
Can I still read fiction while in "recovery" for creative burnout? Like... I don't know, four hours a day or so, since I'm on vacay?