Writer's block is a non-medical condition, primarily associated with writing, in which an author is either unable to produce new work or experiences a creative slowdown.
What do you do when writer's block strikes? Scream, threaten your computer?
How about the outline below for a way to deal with the dreaded "blank screen"? Remember; Inertia is the real enemy!
So, Today I Stared at a Blank Page Like It Owed Me Money.
This morning, I opened a blank document with purpose.
Coffee? Hot.
Brain? Supposedly working, though that might be debatable.
Deadline? Definitely real.
Had the page personally wronged me?
And then I just… stared. What I really needed was "Instant content" - not much of that about I thought!
Not casually. Not thoughtfully. I stared at that blank page like it had personally wronged me. Like it owed me rent. Like if I squinted hard enough, it might finally apologize and produce a paragraph.
It didn't!
If you create content for a living — newsletters, landing pages, hooks, scripts, posts — you know this moment. The blank page isn’t neutral. It’s confrontational. It dares you to be brilliant.
And that’s the trap.
We think the first sentence has to be great.
It doesn’t.
The blank page only wins when you expect excellence on the first swing. But content rarely starts clean. It starts clumsy. It starts sideways. It starts with something mildly ridiculous like:
“So, today I stared at a blank page like it owed me money.”
That’s not polished. It’s not strategic. It’s not perfected.
But it is movement.
And movement kills resistance.
Here’s what experienced creators understand: you don’t write the final version first. You write the messy version on purpose. You let it ramble. You let it be awkward. You let it exist.
Because a bad paragraph can be edited.
A blank page can't.
And yes — you have AI now. Use it. Not to produce the masterpiece, but to break the stare-down. Ask it for five terrible openings. Ask it for ten angles. Ask it to argue with you. The goal isn’t outsourcing creativity. It’s killing inertia.
So next time you open a doc and feel the tension building, don’t wait for brilliance.
Write something obvious.
Write something messy.
Write something you’ll delete.
Just don’t write nothing.
The page doesn’t owe you money.
But it does owe you momentum — once you stop demanding perfection.
Conclusion: Inertia is the real enemy of creative writing, any kind of writing for that matter. If you approach the blank page with an attitude of "Let's get started, this is only the first draft" we break down the barrier of that blank page and progress is so much easier to move forward.
Below, I introduce the answer for people who don't want to face that blank page.
What's your next move?
Do you enjoy creating your own content? Overcoming the "blank page syndrome" that I've described above? Not everyone does!
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