3 Tips to Make Writing Less of a StruggleLet’s say you want to blow up a lab. But what if you took Na + Cl and mixed them together somehow. And you’d be a failure. And this slides us right into why most of us struggle to write. Our emails are crisp. They have flow. And ebb. So if we examine the issue closer, it’s not that you can’t write. Heck, even I find it hard to write under those conditions. Because writing is mostly a factor of enthusiasm. It’s driven by emotion. Yes, you can sit down and write clinically, but the words become kinda yucky. But when you’re having a conversation like this—one on one—then you’re no longer writing. I’m not writing. You’re not reading. We’re “talking” to each other. The words flow. And ebb. So then what causes great writing? Ooh, I hate to boil down ability to any three things, but here goes anyway: Point 1: Failure freezes the brainYou can’t write with failure in mind. If you sit down to write with past experiences of writing “failure,” you will inevitably fail time and time again. Your brain works on pattern recognition, and it sure as heck knows when to give up. So when you sit down and write, past instances of failure pound your brain. Then you freeze. Then you go and find yourself some chocolate to soothe your frazzled neurons. But will you ever learn to write that way? Of course not, because the failure stems from a lack of direction; a lack of structure Point 2: Structure forces the brain into pattern recognitionStructure? Yes structure. Without structure, it’s impossible to identify elements. You see writers don’t just write. Their brain cells scurry around pulling instances of writing structure. It seems like the person is simply writing, but in fact their brains are operating pretty much like a computer. It’s using data that’s been written to your brain over the years. And it’s pulling out that data and memories at high speed and turning it into structure. Structure may sound boring. It’s not. The most creative things in the world would not be around if it weren’t for structure. The Taj Mahal, the Pyramids, a snowflake, Windows Vista—they’re all built on structure (okay, so Windows Vista has flaky structure, but that just underlines the point of this article). The basis is structure. The rest is embellishment. Which takes us to the third part: A mentor. Point 3: Mentors speed up the processA mentor is not critical. I can indeed give you a recipe. And you could follow the steps. And with a little bit of luck, you’d not only cook a great ‘chook’ curry (that’s chicken curry) but also experience immense success. And if you got praise for that chook curry, you’d do it again. And again, thereby building up a success mechanism in your brain. And yes, you may still be absolutely hopeless at baking muffins, your chicken curry is a sheer delight. Of course, if you have a mentor you’ll be making chicken curries with far fewer mistakes. A mentor helps. A mentor sees mistakes you’ve missed. A mentor is a catalyst—but hey, catalysts are just meant to speed up the process. The process, when properly explained will work regardless of the presence of the mentor. But if you’re in a hurry (and most of us are) then someone looking over our shoulders is kinda nice. And should we get stuck, it prevents us from going scurrying back to Failure. Which takes us back to our struggle. The struggle starts in your brain. You have no fear when writing an email. And so you write. Without fear or failure. It’s this structure that drives consistent results time after time. Kaboom! About the Author: Sean D’Souza offers a free report on 'Why Headlines Fail' when you subscribe to his Psychotactics Newsletter. Check out his blog, too. |
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