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Topic : Dealing with writer's block Although I'm not that convinced with this idea but I'd like to take your advise. Can it be a good idea to skip a chapter when having writer's block? - selfpublishingguru.com

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Although I'm not that convinced with this idea but I'd like to take your advise.
Can it be a good idea to skip a chapter when having writer's block?


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Skipping chapters in your books when writing is a good idea if you think it's a good idea... No one else knows your writer mentality... It's usually pretty easy to start out on a book and try to write it chapter by chapter until the end... But when I had writers block writing my short stories... I found that looking at how I wanted my story to playout in the ending, paved my way to write on from where I left off and fill in the gaps in-between...


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That's not a question that can be answered in the abstract.
Sometimes it's so exactly the right thing to do that you look back and realize that your writer's block was your boredom with a superfluous passage, and you never do write it.
Sometimes writer's block turns out to be reluctance to tackle a passage requiring technical skills that you haven't got yet, but the passage is necessary, and in that case, skipping will achieve nothing.
Sometimes you just need to let something jell a little more. I do this by skipping to another work and circling back. Skipping ahead might also work, but I'm too afraid that vital things in that scene might affect the future scenes too much.
An additional important point with letting it jell -- you may realize that something you had thought will not work. You may need to seriously change elements of the scene to get through it. That may invalidate what you write if you skip ahead.


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Skipping a scene, section or chapter that I'm struggling with is one I've used in the past and had some success with - it's better to be writing something than sat there not getting anywhere and getting frustrated. Sketch down some brief notes about what the "missing" section is intended to contain and move on.
Sometimes if you write the section that follows the one you are struggling with it can actually help you write that connecting section as you now have a hole to fit it in to - "what is missing between these two chapters?" is a subtly different question to "what does my next chapter say?" and that difference can be enough of a re-framing of the problem to let you proceed.
I can't guarantee that it will work for you - everyone is going to have their own preferred methods for dealing with writer's block so it's a matter of finding a technique that works for you.


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