Writer's Block

sirhugs

Riding to the Rescue
Joined
Jan 25, 2002
Posts
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Help.

I'm a long time contributor to the stpry side for those who don't know.
Used to be active on this forum but been didtracted by health issues. Focused on writing.

Here's my problem.

I have time and urge to write but all my setups seem stale, and I seem to have lost the ability to write realistic sex scenes (I'm medically impotent and haven't had sex in ages).

Any tips to get me writing again?
 
I’m not exactly an expert on either writers block or my analogy for fixing it, but think about casting your line into a stream. How many times do you do it before you get a bite. And then maybe that one gets away. But persist. Maybe let the boat drift downstream a bit and try a different location. If you keep casting your line, eventually you’ll catch a fish.

*Its probably evident that I have never fished, though my grandpa used to drag me along with him sometimes
 
Help.

I'm a long time contributor to the stpry side for those who don't know.
Used to be active on this forum but been didtracted by health issues. Focused on writing.

Here's my problem.

I have time and urge to write but all my setups seem stale, and I seem to have lost the ability to write realistic sex scenes (I'm medically impotent and haven't had sex in ages).

Any tips to get me writing again?
I'm really sorry to hear this. Writer's block sucks. I get it every year, for at least a week or two in the spring.

It has helped me to think about my writer's block phases as a time to "breathe in". I watch more TV, more movies, play more games, and absorb. I take creativity inward. Eventually I'll be ready to breathe out again, and I try to be patient with myself about it.
 
Write a series of stories about a ‘fictional’ guy who is impotent. How did he discover this? Doctors and nurses who tried to help. Unusual cures he tried. His trip to China for acupuncture. A visit to Paris to find romance. He meets an older French woman. And she teaches him new ways to pleasure a woman using his hands and mouth. He takes his pleasure from her pleasure.

Otherwise, write what you want, and when you reach a sex scene, treat it like science. Break it down into steps and use one sentence for each step. Add some adjectives, and be done with it in two paragraphs. Just avoid categories where lots of sex is expected, and don’t worry about scores.
 
Help.

I'm a long time contributor to the stpry side for those who don't know.
Used to be active on this forum but been didtracted by health issues. Focused on writing.

Here's my problem.

I have time and urge to write but all my setups seem stale, and I seem to have lost the ability to write realistic sex scenes (I'm medically impotent and haven't had sex in ages).

Any tips to get me writing again?
I think I've mentioned these before. Of course, what we do may or may not work for you, but this is what I've got.

1. Revisit characters and situations from your earlier work. Recently, I started adding more to a series that I thought was done five years ago. It had a secondary female character who seemed worth describing further, and so far it is going pretty well. There is also a group of sequels (which could have been a series but I didn't know it then) that I have decided to continue after a four year gap. You don't have to start anew with every submission. You probably have older material that needs another look and can be expanded.

2. Write a non-fiction essay, erotic or not. Usually these can be a mini-memoir about something in your life, even if it was a long time ago. Everybody's got stories about themselves that might be more interesting than you thought. I've got a couple that I'll link to as examples.

https://classic.literotica.com/s/movies-and-memory-ch-01

https://classic.literotica.com/s/new-york-taxi-driving-tales-ch-01

The first one has only two chapters so far, and the second has four. Eventually I'll add to them.
 
I try to find someone to talk about my story with, or do some behind the scenes world building when I'm blocked. If that doesn't work then I read and play video games. If I still can't write and I'm getting frustrated enough then I go coding for Dwarf Fortress. And then somewhere in the super focused trying to figure out which commands and tags will get this reaction, object, or creature working the way I want, I completely forget about what I was trying to write until weeks or months later when I get an insane urge to write and abandon dwarf fortress once again to return to my writing.
 
I've had writers block for a few months now, so I understand the frustration.

Still, I'm trying.

I think when life has us dealing with stuff it does make it harder to focus on writing.

Work through things best you can, hang out on the forum, talk stories, talk about whatever. Make a few friends, fight with a few assholes.

Who knows where inspiration may come from...

Wishing you the best.
 
So by way of a slightly more serious reply...

I'm currently trying to write a story. I only have a vague idea of a plot. But I'm pushing forward on it. Im hoping to just work it out as I go.

Im not worrying about mistakes or over used words or typos. I'll edit later. For now I'm just focusing on the story and the characters.

If I can get a solid story out of it, I can clean up the mistakes later.

even if it winds up sucking, itll still be a story, right?
 
I've had writers block for a few months now, so I understand the frustration.

Still, I'm trying.

I think when life has us dealing with stuff it does make it harder to focus on writing.

Work through things best you can, hang out on the forum, talk stories, talk about whatever. Make a few friends, fight with a few assholes.

Who knows where inspiration may come from...

Wishing you the best.
I think I said something similar to you as I said to @sirhugs above. Another version is that if you have some plot and characters in a series, you can move in any direction to the future or the past. You can even add some incidents in the middle that you haven't thought about before. I had one stand-alone story where I liked the female character (she's the narrator) but instead of going forward, I went back to something that happened twenty years earlier when she was in college. She had mentioned it in passing in the 2024 story, but I decided to fill in the details of what happened back then.

Does that make any sense? If you've got a character you like, there are many sides to that person to write about. Like that group of sequels I mentioned to @sirhugs above. As I write the "fifth installment" after ending it in 2021, I find that I can continue the story in some plausible fashion. Even the setting and back story are in place. The odd thing is that it started as a single stand-alone story that I never intended to continue.
 
Particularly bad writing can get me all fired up to prove that I can do better than a published author.
I feel this viscerally. I recently read a short story which was absolute dross, really extremely poor, and then turned the page to discover it had been turned into a trilogy of real, published books...

I often find that writers' block for me means I need to find a fresh idea to work on. So I might go for a walk, or read, or wait a week or so to see if inspiration strikes.
 
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