Overcoming Writers Block The Usual Backstory A question I got following my last issue was what are my strategies for overcoming writer’s block. Before I answer, I’d have to give more context, so we’ll have to go some years back. Since a child, I’ve always been fascinated with how we humans express ourselves. Thanks to my mother’s biology books, I discovered that my pre-historic grandpa was very close to modern-day baboons. With that in place, the transition from ape to human occupied my child mind. I was trying to figure out how we evolved from swinging on lianas and beating our heads in with stones to the development of languages and alphabets, mainly the Bulgarian I had my fair share of trouble in school. On top of this interest, I had specific conditions in which I had to grow up that required me to pay attention to communication even more. I learned to read non-verbal queues, tone-of-voice and word usage by my relatives and peers from a very early age. This skill directly translated to my close observation of how people express themselves in a written form once I write in my own language. Since the age of 12-13, I was giving my first attempts of writing short comical stories that I was sending around to my schoolmates on Skype with mediocre success. I even had a position suggested for our school newspaper that I rejected because I had a bike to ride. In my early teen years, I was logging an angsty daily journal. Later in my uni, I took on creative writing classes, reaching the point where the professor, a famous Bulgarian writer, read an essay of mine in front of 150 people (a humbling experience). Since I’m done boasting around, I believe I proved my point that writing is something that I’ve enjoyed doing for a while, no matter how challenging it is to this day.
Refracted - Overcoming Writers Block
Refracted - Overcoming Writers Block
Refracted - Overcoming Writers Block
Overcoming Writers Block The Usual Backstory A question I got following my last issue was what are my strategies for overcoming writer’s block. Before I answer, I’d have to give more context, so we’ll have to go some years back. Since a child, I’ve always been fascinated with how we humans express ourselves. Thanks to my mother’s biology books, I discovered that my pre-historic grandpa was very close to modern-day baboons. With that in place, the transition from ape to human occupied my child mind. I was trying to figure out how we evolved from swinging on lianas and beating our heads in with stones to the development of languages and alphabets, mainly the Bulgarian I had my fair share of trouble in school. On top of this interest, I had specific conditions in which I had to grow up that required me to pay attention to communication even more. I learned to read non-verbal queues, tone-of-voice and word usage by my relatives and peers from a very early age. This skill directly translated to my close observation of how people express themselves in a written form once I write in my own language. Since the age of 12-13, I was giving my first attempts of writing short comical stories that I was sending around to my schoolmates on Skype with mediocre success. I even had a position suggested for our school newspaper that I rejected because I had a bike to ride. In my early teen years, I was logging an angsty daily journal. Later in my uni, I took on creative writing classes, reaching the point where the professor, a famous Bulgarian writer, read an essay of mine in front of 150 people (a humbling experience). Since I’m done boasting around, I believe I proved my point that writing is something that I’ve enjoyed doing for a while, no matter how challenging it is to this day.