I usually have no trouble writing. I just sit down and let my fingers do the thinking either on a keyword or with a pen in hand. I love writing. It is like breathing to me. It makes possible my thoughts in print. Only then do they become real and remembered.
This week, I sat down wrote, but what I wrote was too personal for a public blog, so I put that piece of writing aside for another time and space, and I began to think about what I could write about. I read some. I looked at magazines, photos, and gazed out the window. Nothing came to mind. I realized I was having a mild case of writer’s block. I worried a bit but then remembered that worrying would only make it worse.
I scrolled the Internet for ideas. Nothing. Then, I came across a website about visual frameworks. I had never heard of them before, so I familiarized myself with the simple black and white stick-figure pictures. They are simple line drawings that represent an idea or concept. Because they are simple representations, they allow the viewer to expand on ideas and find new insights. I decided to create my own visual framework for writer’s block and then wrote a poem to illustrate the idea.
As I constructed the poem, I wrote six stanzas with six line each. The format made a six-by-six square or a block poem. I liked the idea of poem about writer’s block having the dimensions of a real-life cube.

Overcoming Writer’s Block First things first, Make myself a cup of tea, Hot and steaming, Pour it into my favorite cup, The one with the heart-shaped handle, a student gave me long ago. Then sit down in a sunlight space, Open my laptop and set my timer for thirty minutes. Surely, I can write for thirty minutes, Thirty minutes shouldn’t be too hard, Ready, set, go --- write. Next, I listen for the timer to ding but keep on writing, write anything that comes to mind, make it up, make it wild, make it sad... funny… sweet – make it interesting, keep writing. After the timer goes off, I sit back and relax. take a long, slow breath. I am done for now. Read my words aloud, Enjoy what I've accomplished. Don’t worry, it’s okay if it’s not perfect. Remind myself writing is a process, one idea at a time, one little word followed by another. Let the words grow and string along like a wild, rushing river. In the end, it will take me skipping along the current, over the rapids and the rocks into the wide expanse of the ocean, on my way to another brand-new adventure, keep writing.
Good advice in your 6×6 box. Just keep writing.
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Love this. Tough to experience the block for sure, but now imagine all you can share with your young writers!!!
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I like to use drawing to break through a writer’s block – it can be so freeing, using a different part of my brain. I adore your poem! I think this definition of writing/how to write is really lovely –
one idea at a time,
one little word followed by another.
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Chocolate is how I overcome writer’s block. There’s something about the sweetness and that gets me reinvigorated to write. (No wonder I need to work out daily!)
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I love this piece – both the descriptions of your initial writer’s block as well as the highly clever actual block poem you achieved to overcome it! Practical and helpful!
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I love both the story of the initial writer’s block AND the super clever actual block you created to overcome it. Practical, helpful, and whimsical.
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