linden_jay: (Get Fuzzy- Dear Lord Make it stop)
[personal profile] linden_jay
I have had a headache for twelve hours now. TWELVE HOURS. Ow, no more caps, I swear, even typed shouting hurts my brain. I've tried everything so far, from downing mass amounts of water to taking more than the recommended dosage of Acetaminophen with codeine, to more water, to making the AH give me a massage to try and break up the tension--nothing's giving. If I've worked myself up into a stress migraine from the past week or so, I won't be entirely surprised, but I will be completely pissed off about it. And when I try and lie down to sleep it off, I get dizzy and nauseous, so that isn't working, so, here I am, trying to write my way out of my brain and try and talk out some of the stress that's been gathering for awhile.

I'm not writing well lately. Or, well... that's not exactly it. It's not the writing that's the problem, it's the process. Sometimes, it's working fine, and it's all flowing, and I don't have a problem. And then I'll go to write something else, and bam, I hit a wall. Totally blocked, just staring at words on the screen like they're ants or some other kind of bugs. And sometimes I can battle past it, and I'm hoping like hell that the fact that it's such a damned struggle isn't showing up in the writing, 'cause that's just one more thing for me to stress about that isn't gonna help it get any better. So the writing itself might be fine, might not be fine, but whichever it is, the process is kicking my ass.

And that's not something I'm used to. Writing is the thing that's supposed to come easily to me. And maybe I've taken that for granted. I'm not a solo writer, I've never been a solo writer, and I'm sure that writers block, getting stalled, whatever it is that's happening here, I'm sure it happens. I mean, I know it happens, I see people talking about it all the time. But when you cowrite like I do, with a series of regular writing partners, and an extended group of people that you may not write with all the time, but still pretty often, and you're sitting there and they're waiting for you to reply and you've just got nothing... it sucks. And I'm so used to it not being a problem that it freaks me out that I'm having a problem with it now.

For those who are newer or don't know, most of my writing takes place now in different role playing games, as opposed to standard FPS or RPS writing. It's really pretty much the same, only not. Clear as mud, right? The games that I'm in, they're fic based, so the easiest way to think of them is like a series of WIP's. It's all actor slash, RPS, and there's a set universe, some of the characters are heavily AU, some of them are fairly close to their RP personas. And they interact with other characters, written mostly by other people (this is where the I don't write solo part comes into it) and the story just keeps on going. And there are as many different ways to write and participate in games like these as there are people who write and play in them.

Some people approach it as writing, pure and simple, just the same as any other writing endeavour except with a cowriter involved. Some people see it as gaming, and don't consider themselves writers at all. Some people are more description based, some are more about dialogue than others (this would be how it's just the same as standard FPS and RPS, right here). It all depends on where you got your start, really. Me, I jumped into writing in an RPG with no fandom writing experience whatsoever. I'd been reading fanfic for about four or five months, I had an English Minor. And I've got a Theatre Major, with a big focus on improv during my training.

And that's really how I write, when I write, and a big reason why I cowrite. For me, it's text based improv, edited and written up all pretty, and my reactions, my dialogue, my everything is going to be action/reaction between me and my cowriter(s). It's also why I'm most comfortable writing in AIM or Yahoo... the immediacy, the instant reaction from having the other person right there, waiting for a response, it's very comfortable to me because I can link it directly back to something that I was trained to do. I've gotten better at less-immediate methods, back and forth in gmail, taking turns in writely, but it's the quick back and forth, the real banter where I end up the most at home.

And lately, I'm not writing well. It's not coming as easily, and maybe like I said, I took it for granted, but it's maddening and it's unnerving and it's taking away something that's been my happy-fun-safe-place by making it work. And it's not always, not everything, but some stuff, I just can't make it work.

If there's anyone who's known for writing about writers, it's Aaron Sorkin, which is why I keep saying that I'm having a 'Toby' day (The West Wing), or a 'Matt' moment (Studio 60). There's an episode in Fourth season of The West Wing where Toby's really struggling, and I keep quoting it to people because it just sums up what I'm feeling like right now, a lot of the time.

I don't understand what's going on. I really don't. I've had slumps before. Everybody does, but this is different. I'm sorry, we don't know each other, but there aren't that many people I can talk to about it. I don't understand what's happening. There's no blood going to it. I never had to locate it before. I don't even know where to look.

Part of me is really hoping that just by typing all this out, getting it out of my head and somewhere that I can look at it, the switch will flip again, and I'll be back to normal, and I'll feel kind of silly for having just babbled out a big string of nonsense about feeling like I'm not writing well. And it's not really a vanity thing... I'm not seeking affirmation that I don't suck or I haven't been sucking, because really, it's more been about the process than the product this time, and it's the process that's kicking my ass. And I don't understand what's happening. I've never had to locate it before. I don't even know where to look.

So, to everyone that I'm writing with right now, you know that thing that people always say about how it's not you, it's me? It's not you, it's me. Also, I'm sorry, and I'm gonna keep poking my brain with a stick until it cooperates like it's supposed to, but until then, it's possible that I'm gonna be scattered and inconsistent, pace-wise. Please, don't take it personally, 'cause it's not.

And if my head could stop hurting, that'd be good too. Thirteen hours.

Date: 2007-02-27 12:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] linden-jay.livejournal.com
Thing One: I've been taking Acetaminophen with codeine, which is available over the counter in Canada, and has caffeine in it, which is about the only thing that works for me when I'm in pain. But I'm thinking having some Excedrin on hand might not be a bad call. I rarely get migraines, thank God--and I'm serious--I see how much it knocks you and the other people on my flist back who get them regularly, and I can't imagine how you survive it. Mine are almost always triggered by prolonged stress or angst, and I got lucky this time--usually I'm in for two or three days of agony that doesn't go away until I've been sick a half a dozen times. This one was maybe a day, and never got to critical levels. I'm taking that Excedrin advice though, for the next time.

Thing Two: It is scary, because you never think it's going to happen to you until it is you, and I do get afraid that it's not going to come back. Writing has become so much a part of what I do and who I am, I get a little freaked-twitchy. I'm trying to relax about that and just let it come back in it's own time. And yes, not being in pain=much easier to get anything accomplished.

Thank you and *hugs back*.

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February 2012

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