Writers in the Storm

A blog about writing

storm moving across a field
Want Stronger Writing? Start Writing Less.

by Janice Hardy

Cutting unnecessary words helps your best moments stand out.

A few years ago, I dipped my toe into writing chapter books. It was a new market for me and I looked forward to stretching my creative wings a bit. The publisher had a hard max word count of only six thousand words, but I wasn’t too worried about the count during the first draft, because I wanted to get the story down first. I just wrote what felt right.

Imagine my horror when my first draft came in at just over 7,300 words.

Yikes.

For context, that’s 18% of the novel, so don’t think a small book is any easier to cut than a large one. In a lot of ways, it’s much harder.

Clearly, I had to cut a lot to fit the required word count, and some of those words were going to be ones I loved. Sentences I’d slaved over, descriptions I’d tweaked so they evoked the perfect image, dialogue that flowed off the tongue.

It was time to kill some darlings, and that was gonna hurt. But it had to be done, because…

Every word in your manuscript should earn its place on the page.

Think of it this way. The more words you use, the more diluted your story becomes. All your great hook lines lose impact because they’re surrounded by filler. Your tense moments take too long to unfold and lose their urgency. Powerful descriptions get missed as readers start skimming for the action. The novel you worked so hard writing gets in its own way and lessens the experience for the reader (again, yikes!).

Edit for Focus

Cutting your unnecessary words puts the focus on the parts of the story that matter most.

Let’s look at an example of a snippet that’s not bad, but could be better:

When Maria got home, the phone for Antonio’s consulting business was ringing. He’d wanted the landline so he could appear more professional, even though she’d thought it was a waste of money. Nobody used landlines these days. She dashed across the living room and picked up the receiver from the rolltop desk.

“Hello?” She winced, because Antonio had told her a hundred times to answer with “Salvatore Consulting, what can I do for you today?” but she’d always felt stupid saying that.

“Tony around?” a man asked casually.

Her heart clenched tight as a fist. Tony would never be around again, and she was surprised he hadn’t forwarded his calls to his cell. “I’m sorry, he’s out. Can I take a message?” Maybe then she’d have a reason to call him, just to see if he missed her as much as she missed him. They’d barely spoken since he left three months ago.

“Yeah, tell him we’re meeting the twins for drinks at Bruno’s Taproom at seven instead of The Pit Stop at six. Leslie has a late customer at the salon.”

Shock nearly drove her to her knees. She gripped the phone so tight her knuckles went white, and her tight throat wouldn’t let any words out. Antonio was meeting a woman for drinks? Was that a date? It sure sounded like a date. How could he be dating already? They’d only been separated since Christmas. The divorce papers hadn’t even been filed yet.

“I’ll tell him,” she squeaked, her voice barely louder than a whisper. “Thank you for calling.”

She put the phone back in the cradle and wrapped her arms around herself. This couldn’t be happening. As the tears welled in her eyes, she slid down to the navy carpet and sobbed. She’d always thought he’d come back, but one phone call had dashed her dreams to bits. (311 words)

This snippet has a lot of common first-draft issues—it’s overwritten in parts, has a lot of telling, and no strong sense of the character.

Now let’s tighten it up and see how it reads:

Ringing greeted Maria as she entered the house—the stupid landline Antonio insisted would look professional, but just added a bill they hadn’t needed every month. They’d have been better off using the cash for a monthly date night. They might still be married.

She snatched up the receiver. “Hello?” No way was she answering with “Salvatore Consulting, what can I do for you today?” like Antonio told her to.

“Tony around?” a man asked.

His words punched her in the gut. Tony would never be around again. Hold it together. “No, can I take a message?” If so, she’d have a reason to call him that wasn’t “I miss you, do you miss me?”

“Yeah, tell him we’re meeting the twins for drinks at Bruno’s Taproom at seven.”

Her skin flushed hot, then icy cold. Antonio was meeting a woman for drinks? After only three months? The divorce papers hadn’t even been filed yet.

“Sure,” she squeaked, her throat tight. She dropped the phone back in the cradle and hugged herself. This couldn’t be happening. He was supposed to come back.

Bruno’s at seven? She glanced at the clock. Five-seventeen. (191 words)

Cutting the unnecessary words saves 120 words and gives a better sense of who Maria is and how she feels about Antonio dating again. Tastes may vary, but I think the shorter version makes readers care more about Maria because her reactions are clearer without all the overdone emotional tells.

Now for funsies, let’s look at why I cut the words I did:

Original:

When Maria got home, the phone for Antonio’s consulting business was ringing. He’d wanted the landline so he could appear more professional, even though she’d thought it was a waste of money. Nobody used landlines these days. She dashed across the living room and picked up the receiver from the rolltop desk. (52 words)

Trimmed:

Ringing greeted Maria as she entered the house—the stupid landline Antonio insisted would look professional, but just added a bill they hadn’t needed every month. They’d have been better off using the cash for a monthly date night. They might still be married. (44 words)

The important details are the ringing phone, the fact it’s a landline, and Maria’s feelings about it. The type of desk doesn’t matter, and I’d assume the room was probably already described prior to this scene. I combined several sentences into one with “the stupid landline Antonio insisted…” which also showed more of Maria’s voice. It also felt important to show hints of their relationship and why it failed, so I added the “…monthly date night” line.

Original:

“Hello?” She winced, because Antonio had told her a hundred times to answer with “Salvatore Consulting, what can I do for you today?” but she’d always felt stupid saying that. (30 words)

Trimmed:

She snatched up the receiver. “Hello?” No way was she answering with “Salvatore Consulting, what can I do for you today?” like Antonio told her to. (26 words)

“Wincing” in the original version was ambiguous, since you can wince for several reasons, but “Snatching up” the phone implies annoyance or irritation, which shows she had issues with the cost of the phone, and having to answer it annoyed her. I also put the reasons for not answering the phone in her voice, which supports her annoyance.

Original:

“Tony around?” a man asked casually. (6 words)

Trimmed:

“Tony around?” a man asked. (5 words)

The dialogue itself is casual, so we don’t need the adverb.

Original:

Her heart clenched tight as a fist. Tony would never be around again, and she was surprised he hadn’t forwarded his calls to his cell. “I’m sorry, he’s out. Can I take a message?” Maybe then she’d have a reason to call him, just to see if he missed her as much as she missed him. They’d barely spoken since he left three months ago. (65 words)

Trimmed:

His words punched her in the gut. Tony would never be around again. Hold it together. “No, can I take a message?” If so, she’d have a reason to call him that wasn’t “I miss you, do you miss me?” (40 words)

The question blindsides Maria and causes an immediate emotional reaction. The extra explanations about why the call came to the landline and how long it had been since they’d spoken weakens that “gut punch” of emotion. If she’s rational enough to think those other thoughts, how thrown could she be?

Original:

“Yeah, tell him we’re meeting the twins for drinks at Bruno’s Taproom at seven instead of The Pit Stop at six. Leslie has a late customer at the salon.” (29 words)

Trimmed:

“Yeah, tell him we’re meeting the twins for drinks at Bruno’s Taproom at seven.” (14 words)

This is a straight up “infodump through dialogue” fix. The original tells readers unnecessary details about the date, because the caller has no reason to tell her anything more than the time and location change. I kept the “Bruno’s Taproom” since I want to show Maria might go there, adding a bit more narrative drive to the scene.

Original:

Shock nearly drove her to her knees. She gripped the phone so tight her knuckles went white, and her tight throat wouldn’t let any words out. Antonio was meeting a woman for drinks? Was that a date? It sure sounded like a date. How could he be dating already? They’d only been separated since Christmas. The divorce papers hadn’t even been filed yet. (63 words)

Trimmed:

Her skin flushed hot, then icy cold. Antonio was meeting a woman for drinks? After only three months? The divorce papers hadn’t even been filed yet. (26 words)

The original is full of clichés and verges on melodrama. What matters here is that she has an emotional reaction as she processes that Antonio has a date three months after moving out.

Original:

“I’ll tell him,” she squeaked, her voice barely louder than a whisper. “Thank you for calling.”

She put the phone back in the cradle and wrapped her arms around herself. This couldn’t be happening. As the tears welled in her eyes, she slid down to the navy carpet and sobbed. She’d always thought he’d come back, but one phone call had dashed her dreams to bits. (68 words)

Trimmed:

“Sure,” she squeaked, her throat tight. She dropped the phone back in the cradle and hugged herself. This couldn’t be happening. He was supposed to come back.

Bruno’s at seven? She glanced at the clock. Five-seventeen. (36 words)

The last two paragraphs pour on the melodramatic reactions and don’t give a sense of how Maria is handling this news. It also makes Maria look like she can barely function, and if she’s that thrown, she won’t be answering in complete sentences. Barely squeaking out “Sure” shows she’s a bit speechless, but still in control of herself.

I also added the bit at the end to show she might act on hearing Antonio had a date, because it just felt like that’s where the scene was going after I tightened it up. The edits not only picked up the pace, but gave it a stronger narrative drive.

Could I have elaborated and used up more of those 120 extra words? Absolutely. If it was important to add in some of the other details, or expand more on Maria’s thoughts or emotions, I could have easily done that.

But here’s the thing—did I need to? I'd say no.

Readers don’t notice what you cut, but they absolutely feel what you didn’t.

That’s the difference between a “Wow, you’ve got to read this book!” and a “Oh, yeah, I read that. Not bad” reader reaction.

Final Thoughts

Remember…you’re not deleting words you like, you’re clearing away the clutter and revealing the story you love. Every unnecessary word you cut makes the important ones stronger, and every trimmed sentence sharpens your pacing. Tossing out all the chaff gives your best moments more room to breathe.

I get it, it hurts to cut words you worked hard writing, but if your story will be stronger for it, then grit your teeth and do it. A story readers can clearly read is one that they’ll fall in love with.

If you want to learn more ways to trim your manuscript, check out my book Revising Your Novel: First Draft to Finished Draft. It’s full of tips, examples, and strategies to tighten your draft and let your story shine.

Is it easy or hard for you to trim words from your manuscript? What tips would you give someone struggling with this?

About Janice

Janice Hardy

Janice Hardy is the award-winning author and founder of the popular writing site Fiction University, where she helps writers improve their craft and navigate the crazy world of publishing. Not only does she write about writing, she teaches workshops across the country, and her blog has been recognized as a Top Writing Blog by Writer’s Digest. She also spins tales of adventure for both teens and adults, and firmly believes that doing terrible things to her characters makes them more interesting (in a good way). She loves talking with writers and readers, and encourages questions of all types—even the weird ones.

Find out more about writing at www.Fiction-University.com, or visit her author’s site at www.JaniceHardy.com. Subscribe to stay updated on future books, workshops, and events and receive her ebook, 25 Ways to Strengthen Your Writing Right Now, free.

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Top Image by Jan Vašek from Pixabay

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How to Create Compelling Hooks for Every Chapter

By Jenn Windrow

Years ago, I found this graphic on Pinterest and immediately saved it to my computer. This was well before I started my developmental editing business. But as a writer, I always found it compelling. I firmly believe in the idea of hooking the reader, grabbing their attention, so they don’t want to wiggle off the hook, ensuring they want to stay captured and captivated.

But keeping them hooked requires more than a perfect first line.

However, writers obsess over the opening line of the book, something I fully support, but they then forget that every single chapter opening has the same job.

To hook the reader again and again and again.

If your chapters don’t pull readers in and push them forward, your story stalls. Quietly. Invisibly. Until readers drift off and never come back.

Hooks Aren’t Just for Page One

A hook is a promise. It tells the reader something interesting is happening and it’s worth their time to keep going. It engages them. It evokes emotion. It pulls them into the story.  

And while a killer first line is one of the best hooks you can have, it shouldn’t be the last hook in your book. Each and every chapter should have its own hook. But not just the start of your chapters, the end of your chapters as well.

Here’s why.

Every chapter opening should:

  • Re-engage the reader
  • Re-establish tension or curiosity
  • Make it impossible to put the book down

And every chapter ending should:

  • Create forward momentum
  • Raise a new question or complication
  • Make it impossible to put the book down (yes, that is listed for both, you want your readers to go to work exhausted the next day because they were up too late reading your words.)

When I’m writing, I will spend far too much time focusing on the opening paragraph to every chapter, as well as the chapter endings. For me, this is really some of the most important real estate my books have, and I spend the time making sure they do the job they were constructed to do.

Here is an example…

This is the end of chapter 3. I wanted to end the chapter with a bit of foreshadowing of what to expect.

A water nymph fought against the goblin guards. A nymph who would be used and abused to prove a point. A point the commander wanted hammered into my skull. Because I had saved a nymph, he would sacrifice one.

            And the mind games were about to begin.

And this is the start of chapter 4. A quick recap to reengage the reader, but also add the emotional tension and internal conflict the main character now faces.

The commander caught a nymph. Just another one of his sick, twisted, and manipulative ways to prove that he would always win the unspoken battle between us. A battle I wasn’t sure I was corrupt enough to fight.

But not every writer knows how to write a good hook. They struggle with what a good hook is supposed to do, how to construct it, and where to even begin. If you are one of those writers, here are 13 easy cheats to get you started.

13 Types of Hooks You Can Use Anywhere

These aren’t just for your first line. These are tools you can use at the start of any chapter, and even echo at the end to keep momentum alive.

Drop us into something happening.

The blade slipped from her hand.

Why it works:
Action bypasses explanation and goes straight to engagement. The reader doesn’t need context yet, they need motion. Movement creates questions automatically. What just happened? Why does it matter?

Use it when:

  • You’re entering a high-stakes moment
  • The previous chapter ended on tension, and you want to pay it off immediately
  • You need to accelerate pacing

Common mistake:
Starting with action that has no emotional anchor. Action without meaning is noise.

Frame the emotional state quickly.

Grief settled in like a storm that refused to pass.

Why it works:
An analogy compresses emotion into something instantly recognizable. Instead of explaining how a character feels, you translate it into something the reader already understands.

Use it when:

  • You’re shifting into a more introspective or emotional beat
  • You need to quickly ground the reader in tone after a scene break

Common mistake:
Overcomplicating the comparison. If readers have to think too hard about it, you’ve lost the effect.

Break the fourth wall with intention.

Remember this moment.

Why it works:
It creates immediacy and importance. You’re signaling that what follows matters, which sharpens reader focus.

Use it when:

  • You have a strong, voice-driven narrative
  • You want to emphasize a turning point or key moment

Common mistake:
Using it without a payoff. If you tell the reader to pay attention, you’d better deliver.

Make the reader pause.

Magic always comes with a cost.

Why it works:
It establishes rules, stakes, or intrigue in one clean line. It also invites the reader to test that statement as the story unfolds.

Use it when:

  • You want to anchor theme or world rules quickly
  • You need a strong tonal reset at the start of a chapter

Common mistake:
Generic statements. If it sounds like it could apply to any story, it’s not pulling its weight.

Pull us inside.

I shouldn’t be here.

Why it works:
This creates instant intimacy. Readers don’t just observe the story, they experience it from within the character.

Use it when:

  • You’re reconnecting after a POV shift
  • The emotional stakes are driving the scene

Common mistake:
Starting with vague or low-stakes thoughts. “I was tired” won’t hook anyone.

Reframe an idea.

Betrayal is just trust, turned inside out.

Why it works:
It signals theme and adds a layer of meaning to what’s about to happen. It primes the reader to interpret the scene through a specific lens.

Use it when:

  • You’re setting up a thematic chapter
  • You want to deepen the reader’s understanding of a concept central to the story

Common mistake:
Sounding like a dictionary or a quote board. It needs voice and specificity.

Start mid-moment.

“You lied to me.”

Why it works:
Dialogue skips setup and drops the reader directly into conflict. It implies context without explaining it, which creates curiosity.

Use it when:

  • You want immediate tension
  • The scene begins with confrontation or high emotion

Common mistake:
Starting with neutral or mundane dialogue. If the line doesn’t create tension, it doesn’t belong here.

Hint at consequences.

This was the last time she would trust him.

Why it works:
It creates anticipation and dread. The reader now knows something is coming, and they’ll read to find out how it happens.

Use it when:

  • You’re building toward a turning point
  • You want to layer tension into a quieter scene

Common mistake:
Being too vague or too dramatic. It needs to feel earned, not manipulative.

Use sound for immersion.

Thud. Something hit the floor behind her.

Why it works:
It engages the senses immediately. Sound is one of the fastest ways to pull a reader into a moment.

Use it when:

  • You’re opening in the middle of an event
  • You want a sharp, sensory entry point

Common mistake:
Overusing it or making it feel gimmicky. It should enhance the moment, not distract.

Create curiosity.

Why was the door already open?

Why it works:
Questions naturally create forward momentum. The reader wants the answer, and the only way to get it is to keep reading.

Use it when:

  • You’re introducing a mystery or problem
  • You want to guide reader focus immediately

Common mistake:
Asking questions that don’t matter or get answered too easily.

Anchor the story.

Power always demands a sacrifice.

Why it works:
It tells the reader what this chapter, and often the story, is really about beneath the surface.

Use it when:

  • You’re entering a pivotal or reflective moment
  • You want to reinforce the story’s core message

Common mistake:
Being heavy-handed. It should feel like insight, not a lecture.

Cut straight to impact.

Not again.

Why it works:
Fragments strip language down to emotion. They’re fast, punchy, and often carry urgency or dread.

Use it when:

  • You want a sharp tonal hit
  • You’re continuing momentum from a previous chapter

Common mistake:
Overusing fragments so they lose impact.

Drop us into the world.

The castle stood silent, its gates wide open.

Why it works:
It orients the reader while creating mood. When done right, setting itself becomes a source of tension.

Use it when:

  • Atmosphere matters to the scene
  • The environment plays a role in what’s about to happen

Common mistake:
Letting description stall the story. Setting should create curiosity, not pause it.

Chapter Openings: Re-Hook the Reader

Every time a reader starts a new chapter, they’ve had a break. Even if it’s just a breath. You have to earn them back. Because you want them to stay rooted in your story, attached to your characters, and submersed in your world.

Strong chapter openings:

  • Start in motion or tension
  • Avoid re-explaining what we already know
  • Anchor us quickly in who, where, and what matters

Weak openings:

  • Ease in with description
  • Rehash the last chapter
  • Delay the point

If your chapter takes a page to “get going,” it’s already too late.

Chapter Endings: The Real Power Move

A strong chapter ending is what makes readers say, “Just one more.” You don’t need a cliffhanger every time. But you do need momentum. You need them to want to stay. You want them to turn that page and keep reading.

The most effective chapter endings...

  • Introduce a new problem
  • Shift the stakes
  • Reveal something unexpected
  • Leave an emotional beat unresolved

The Mistake I See Constantly

As an editor, I ensure that all my clients understand what I expect at the start and end of each chapter. Some of my clients might say I am too tough on openings, but I do it because I want them to create the best book possible.

However, I have noticed that writers treat chapters like containers instead of engines. They start soft. They end neatly. They move on. But stories don’t thrive on neat. They thrive on tension.

If a reader can comfortably stop at the end of your chapter, you’ve given them an exit. And the last thing you want a reader to do is exit.

Your job is to make them hesitate. Make them want to stay.

A Simple Fix You Can Apply Today

Take one chapter and do this:

Step 1: Rewrite the opening using a different hook type
Try action, dialogue, or a bold statement.

Step 2: Rewrite the ending to create a question
Not confusion. Curiosity.

Step 3: Read the transition into the next chapter
Does it feel inevitable? Or optional?

Final Thought

Your story doesn’t hook the reader once. It hooks them over and over again. At the start of the book. At the start of every chapter. At the end of every chapter. That’s what keeps pages turning.

Because you story is not built on good writing alone, it's built on relentless momentum. And momentum is built one hook at a time.

Be honest. Are your chapters pulling readers forward… or quietly letting them walk away?

About Jenn Windrow

Jenn Windrow once attempted to write a “normal” book—and promptly bored herself into a coma. So now she sticks to what she does best: writing snarky, kick-butt heroines, broody supernatural men, and more sexual tension than a vampire in a blood bank.

She’s the award-winning author of the Alexis Black novels and the Redeeming Cupid series, where the undead never sparkle and the drama is always delicious. Jenn moonlights as a developmental editor, helping other writers wrangle their wild plots and tangle-free prose.

When not arguing with her characters or muttering about Oxford commas, she can be found binge-watching trash TV, wrangling the slew of animals that live in her house (husband and teenagers included), or telling herself she’ll only have one more cookie.

You can find her at jennwindrow.com or lurking on social media where she pretends to be an extrovert.

Header image from Unsplash by Kaptured by Kasia 

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Things that Stop Us in Our Tracks: Are you your worst enemy?

by Ossandra White

As creatives, there are lots of things that stop us from…creating. There are physical reasons, like fatigue, sickness, chronic illness, pain, discomfort, eye strain, and other such issues that hinder our bodies from actually doing the thing. There are situational constraints, such as busy schedules, other obligations, or simply the day’s 24-hour limit.

But sometimes, even when we are feeling our best and have cleared our schedules, we sit down to write and something still stops us. What if we could get down to the very root and core of it all, pinpointing the exact reasons why we are stopped so that we can correctly diagnose a solution? This article may help you get started towards doing just that. I can’t cover everything, but I can try to walk you through some of the things that you can do to step closer towards identifying the things that stop you and figuring out what to do about them.

Self-Assessment

If you are attempting to be productive and you just don’t feel right, try stopping, closing your eyes, taking a deep breath, and checking in with yourself. Create a go-to list of questions to ask yourself when you feel unsettled and actually answer honestly. You often must admit there is a problem before you can treat it.

  • Am I feeling pain or discomfort anywhere in my body?
  • How long have I been staring at a screen?
  • Am I unintentionally holding my breath?
  • Is there any stressful situation happening in my life that my soul is troubled about?
  • When was the last time I…
    • …ate a meal?
    • …drank water?
    • …went to the restroom?
    • …got sleep?
    • …did something I enjoyed that had nothing to do with work?
    • …stretched?
    • …got fresh air?
    • …took a moment to appreciate nature?

You may already know other triggers that cause you to feel strange. Place those on your list as well.

Different Barriers

Once you’ve checked in, you’re likely to know what you’re facing. Physical, mental, and even spiritual barriers exist. Sometimes, all three types at once. Not all problems can be solved, but knowing the reasoning behind our blocks typically helps us put things into perspective and give ourselves grace. 

Cramping and Stiffness

Stretching regularly is good when we sit at our desks and hunch over screens all day. Roll your neck and shoulders. Flex your fingers and wrists. Come away from your workstation. Bend and move around. Sometimes, being locked in one position for too long can cause our brains to be locked as well. If it helps, set an interval timer to remind you.

Eye Strain

Staring at a screen for too long can have us seeing stars! Take some time to look away. Close your eyes and place your palms over them. Count and think of something pleasant. Go look at something else, like art or nature. Admire things in your environment. Take a moment to appreciate the beauty in the mundane. Look at something without the intention of working on it. 

Deprivation of Nature

Studies have shown that most humans feel better when exposed to sunlight and fresh air. Though people have created these little industrial domes powered by electricity and cutting ourselves off from the world, it can actually do some good to ‘touch grass’, as the kiddos say these days. If you can’t go outside, open a window, or at least look out of one. If you have any house plants, tend to them. If you have pets or other humans, spend some time with them. Even if you can’t access real nature, try looking up nature ambience on YouTube. You may find calm in the sound of wind, rain, or birdsong.

Lack of Sleep

There are only twenty-four hours in the day, and it seems strange to spend so much of them sleeping. But sleep is important! Our brains need rest! Sometimes, we are rushing around and trying to do so much that we neglect ourselves. This, in turn, makes things more difficult for us.

I often push myself for days on end without rest. It may seem that busy and productive people have to power through like this, but sometimes, when we take care of ourselves, the load becomes lighter and easier. Once, I was staring at a page with a sleep-deprived brain. I couldn’t make it work until I fell asleep unawares and woke up with fresh perspective. Things that seemed so difficult in the darkness of night suddenly seemed almost comically laughable in the morning light.

Ignoring Doctor’s Orders

I know some rules are annoying, but regimens from medical professionals usually have our own best interests in mind. When we’re sick or have a chronic illness, it is important to adhere to what our healthcare providers suggest. Avoiding short-term aggravations could be costing us in the long run.

Indecisiveness

Analysis paralysis. So many options stand before us that we freeze up. In these cases, we can postpone choosing by focusing on something else, ask others what they think, or even leave it to chance and roll a die or something. This, of course, depends on how high the stakes are. I’d think twice about a crucial life decision, but might spin a wheel to settle on what color a character in my story is wearing.

Negative Self-Talk

Many of us can stand up to the criticism of others. However, when the call is coming from inside the house, it may be more of a problem. Often, it can help to combat lies with truth. For every negative thing your mind thinks, declare a positive thing back at it.

Lack of Focus

When we strain our brains with work for too long, they often start wandering away on their own. Give your brain a break by breathing, praying, meditating, thinking of other things, or even doing something else you enjoy. Play a game. Watch a show or movie. Listen to music and dance. Read something for enjoyment. Sometimes, doing these things can help you return refreshed and renewed.

Stress

Things happen, and we’re supposed to keep going. Nevertheless, not taking time to acknowledge that something is wrong, even if we can’t do anything about it, can lurk idly in the back of our brains. Our minds trying to progress without stopping to mourn or accept can be like a computer with a large program that opens on startup and keeps running in the background, causing laggy slog. When these pop up, we can’t always shut them off completely.

They may be necessary in the grand scheme of things. But often, clicking into them and accepting that they are running in the background calms things down better than leaving them ignored. They’ll still be stuck on their intro screens if we don’t face them. Just like in life. Grief doesn’t always go away, but acknowledging and learning to grow with it can be more liberating than pretending it doesn’t exist while letting it bog down our souls. Reaching out and talking to others about it may also help. Sometimes, we just need to get things off our chest so we don’t stew in it all alone.

Fear of Failure (or Success)

If we don’t want to work, it may be that our brains have fast-forwarded to all the things that will happen as a result of the writing.

If we write, we might finish this chapter

…then, the whole manuscript…

…then, we’re going to have to edit…

…then, we’re going to have to send it to proofreaders…

…then, when we finally publish, what if a reader leaves a bad review!?

This may sound outlandish, but really reflect on your brain’s thoughts. Channel what you could be dreading. Consequences are important to consider, but with something like this, it’s good to focus on one thing at a time. If a bad review is really what you are trying to avoid, you can remind yourself that you could also get a good review and that reviews are not the end goal. Why are you writing? What is your passion? Let these things surpass any fears or doubts you may have.

Personifying Our Obstacles

Sometimes, it can be helpful to personify the things that stop us. Taking them out of ourselves and looking at them as their own being can make it easier to defeat (or even care for!) them.

Negative self-talk may feel hopeless, but envisioning it as another person talking to us might motivate us to speak up for ourselves and prove ‘them’ wrong.

We may not feel it necessary to eat (though it really is)! But if hunger were a pet, we may be more motivated to nurture it. And, sometimes, it just takes us paying attention.

What holds you back? How do you work through it?

* * * * * *

About Ossandra

Ossandra White, also known as Wordigirl, is truly a Jill of all Trades. She writes amazing books, crafts fabulous websites and branding designs, and creates worlds that rock. She'll be teaching at the Creating Creativity: Dragon Edition, virtual conference, on May 15th and 16th, 2026 and would love for you all to join her! You can find more information at http://www.mindpotential.org. Or you can contact Ossandra directly at Ossandra White | Jill of all Trades


Top Image by Pete Linforth from Pixabay

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