Purpose
Help writers get unstuck and start writing. Diagnose the type of block and apply targeted techniques to break through.
When to Use
Use this Skill when someone:
- Stares at blank pages unable to start
- Procrastinates on writing tasks
- Feels stuck mid-piece
- Has perfectionism blocking output
- Faces a specific writing challenge they're avoiding
Step-by-Step Process
Step 1: Diagnose the Block Type
Not all blocks are the same. Identify which type:
Clarity Block
- Don't know what to say
- Topic feels too vague or too big
- Haven't done enough thinking yet
Fear Block
- Know what to say but scared to say it
- Worried about judgment
- Perfectionism paralysis
Energy Block
- Too tired or depleted
- Wrong time of day
- Trying to force it
Process Block
- Don't know how to start
- Stuck on structure
- Editing while writing (stopping flow)
Motivation Block
- Don't care about topic
- Lost connection to why it matters
- Boring themselves
Step 2: Apply Targeted Techniques
For Clarity Blocks:
- Talk it out: Explain to an imaginary friend what you want to say
- Write the ugly first: Get garbage on page, refine later
- Start with "The point I'm trying to make is..."
- Outline with questions: What's the problem? What's the solution? So what?
For Fear Blocks:
- Lower the stakes: "This is just a draft"
- Write to one person: Imagine specific reader
- Permission to be bad: "I'm just going to write something terrible"
- Time-box: "Just 15 minutes, no judgment"
For Energy Blocks:
- Change environment
- Move first (walk, stretch)
- Try different time of day
- Brain dump before real writing
For Process Blocks:
- Don't start at the beginning
- Write the part you know
- Use voice notes instead
- Separate writing and editing completely
For Motivation Blocks:
- Reconnect to reader: Who needs this?
- Find your angle: What do YOU think about this?
- Write the version that interests you
- Ask: What would make this fun to write?
Step 3: Create Emergency Start Protocol
A go-to process for when they're stuck:
- Set timer for 10 minutes
- Write the worst possible version
- Don't stop typing until timer ends
- Review: Find one sentence worth keeping
- Build from that sentence
Step 4: Build Block Prevention Habits
Long-term strategies:
- End sessions mid-sentence (easier to restart)
- Keep an idea backlog (always know what's next)
- Regular writing time (builds habit momentum)
- Separate writing and editing sessions
- Write when energy is high, edit when low
Step 5: Address the Deeper Issue
If blocks are chronic, explore:
- Is the topic wrong for them?
- Is the audience unclear?
- Are they writing what they "should" vs. want to?
- Is there external pressure distorting the work?
Step 6: Create Output Document
Generate a "Block Breakthrough Toolkit" containing:
- Their Block Type (diagnosed)
- Targeted Techniques (for their type)
- Emergency Start Protocol
- Prevention Habits
- Deeper Questions to Explore
- Quick Reference Card (when stuck, do THIS)
Voice Guidelines
- Be compassionate about the struggle
- Normalize the block - everyone faces it
- Make techniques feel simple and accessible
- Celebrate any forward movement
Example
Input: Creator who freezes whenever they open a blank doc, spent 3 hours "preparing" without writing
Output: Block Breakthrough Toolkit showing:
- Block type: Fear + Process (perfectionism + trying to edit while writing)
- Technique: Ugly first draft + voice notes
- Protocol: Record voice memo of thoughts → transcribe → clean up
- Prevention: End each session with tomorrow's first sentence drafted
- Deeper: May be chasing approval instead of expression - explore why they write