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vedikadayal
vedikadayal January 18, 2021
Innovation

3 Steps for Writers to Turn Blah Blocks Into Building Blocks

Photo by Geraldine Lewa on Unsplash
Photo by Geraldine Lewa on Unsplash

In 1916, a man named Joe Gould came to New York City. He slept in doorways, hung out in diners, and took a shower every now and then. His golden rule was that he would wear a garment until someone gave him a new one. Then, he would throw the old one out. You wouldn’t be able to tell by looking at him, but he came from a long line of wealthy Harvard graduates.

Gould had been working on a book for many years, which he called “An Oral History.” He told everyone he could about the project, of which he was millions of words in. “In time to come,” he declared, “people may read Gould’s Oral History to see what went wrong with us, the way we read Gibbon’s ‘Decline and Fall’ to see what went wrong with the Romans.” Many people bought him meals and drinks, predicting that he would soon become a famous author.

It’s been more than a century, and very few people know Gould’s work. So, what happened?

~

Writer’s block is a phony, made up BS excuse for not doing your work. — Jerry Seinfeld

Much of our culture today mirrors Seinfeld’s words. We write off writer’s block as a lack of motivation to write — or worse, as laziness. As a result, many authors take pride in publicly denouncing the condition. The rest of us are left in the dust.

But let’s take a step back. What even is writer’s block? Wikipedia describes says it is when “an author loses the ability to produce new work or experiences a creative slowdown.” We don’t know what to write about, so we don’t write at all.

Somehow, Wikipedia doesn’t do my feelings justice. I have revisions for my manuscript due in two weeks. I know that I am perfectly capable of finishing it in time. Yet, I am currently sitting and writing an article to you about how I can’t write. I haven’t lost my ability to produce new work as the classic definition suggests. I just feel “blah” about book-writing.

Wikipedia doesn’t do my feelings justice, because I’m not experiencing writer’s block. I’m experiencing a blah block.

If you have an urgent deadline coming up but can’t seem to find the motivation to write, you may have stumbled upon a blah block. If you know exactly what you want to say, but can’t convince your brain to get the words out, you may be experiencing a blah block. If you can’t think of any word to describe your creative struggle other than “blah,” you’re definitely in a blah block.

As opposed to a writing block, which is a lack of motivation to come up with ideas in the first place, a blah block involves a lack of motivation to turn the ideas you already have into a flowing story or piece of writing.

The good news for you is that I have experienced dozens of these blocks in the last few months as I’ve worked my way through writing my first book. And coming out of them, they have helped me form the foundation for much stronger writing. To turn our blah blocks into building blocks, we need to follow the three R’s: refuel, reflect, and rewire.

Refuel

To be productive, you need to be unproductive sometimes.

When you can’t convince yourself to keep creating, it means your brain needs a break. Indulge it. This means physically stepping away from your workspace and doing something that is not writing-related. To be effective, the words “wasting time” can’t cross your mind. Instead, treat it as a necessary way to supercharge your writing. Many studies have shown that idle time is when your brain is at its most creative.

Some suggestions:

  • Take a walk while listening to a podcast.
  • Read a book (the more different from your current work, the better).
  • Learn a quick new skill (juggling is known to be awesome for your brain and fun).
  • Watch a movie.
  • Take a shower.
  • Close your eyes and listen to music. I particularly like this one of a coffee shop on a rainy day with lo-fi music.

Reflect

In Indistractable, author Nir Eyal talks about the root of distraction. We are surrounded by external triggers — things outside of us that are the sources of our distraction (for example, our phones). But why do we seek distraction?

This is where internal triggers come in. Internal triggers are our fears and insecurities — they cause us to seek external triggers of distraction. My theory is that blah blocks work in a similar way. Our brain is trying to escape writing, and we have to reflect on why. Ask yourself: why am I letting myself not continue writing?

When I did this exercise, I realized it was because I am scared. Your internal trigger is likely different — it could be boredom or fear. Whatever it is, dig deeper. Ask yourself why repeatedly. Why am I bored? Why am I scared? Why am I insecure?

For me, it’s because I am 19-years-old and writing my first book. Once it’s published, it’ll be out in the world with my name on it forever. It feels like getting a tattoo. How can I be sure I won’t regret it when I’m ninety and my body is entirely different?

Whatever your internal trigger is, write it down. This is your building block.

Rewire

Often, we try to fix writer’s block through brute force. If I stare at the page long enough, words will have to come out eventually. But things didn’t work the last time you sat down to write for a reason. Rewiring is when we seek change. It is setting the building block we got from reflecting down as the foundation of our work, so we can begin creating again.

Go back to your internal triggers. How can you combat them? Boredom may require a different project while insecurity requires taking the pressure off your first draft. Let the people close to you know about your plan, so they can hold you accountable and support you.

Along with these smaller changes, find ways to rewire your environment. During the pandemic, I’ve sought new environments by writing in a car instead of my home. When I begin feeling blah, I can drive to a new place and soak in a new environment. Wires come in all shapes and sizes.

~

Joe Gould died at the age of sixty-eight. His friends began looking for his manuscript, hoping to uncover the secrets of his work. Several days later, they found it: a poem, a fragment of an essay, and a few letters. The vision Gould had for his book never manifested. He was the victim of a life-long blah block.

His story is now one people lament when they think of writer’s block. But by nature of reading this, you still have a lifetime to create the idea on your mind. Gould’s problem lay in denying his feeling of blah. Your solution can lay in embracing it.

If you enjoyed reading this, I’d love to have you on my newsletter, Caffeine for Your Inbox, where I send out weekly tidbits on living a more intentional, innovative life. I’ll send you free Notion templates for your weekly dashboard, journal, and to-do lists as a token of thanks.
Caffeinate Your Inbox
vedikadayal
vedikadayal December 21, 2020
Innovation

The 2020 Small-Business Friendly Gift Guide (for Procrastinators)

Photo by Geraldine Lewa on Unsplash
Photo by Geraldine Lewa on Unsplash

This one is for all the procrastinators out there. If you’re anything like me, you always wait until the last minute to find gifts. But you still want the gifts to come on time, be affordable, and support small businesses and creators.

My mom always says you can’t have everything, and I’ve always believed her. I usually 2-day-free-delivery my way through Secret Santa. But this year, I went searching through the 11th page of Google to find some gems that were bank account, small business, and time friendly. Grab your credit card and let’s go shopping!

A quick note about books: All the books below link to Bookshop.org, a website that supports local, independent bookstores. These are affiliate links. However, it’s not likely that your Bookshop order will come by December 25th. Instead, use Bookshop as a platform to find local bookstores. You can call your local shops directly and ask about the availability of the book you want. Many of my local shops are doing curbside delivery!

For the Caffeine Addict

  • A personalized coffee subscription box from Trade Coffee. Boxes start at $10. Trade Coffee also offers other fun coffee-themed gifts, like Cold Brew Bags ($7.50), a French Press ($36), and coffee bundles ($40).
  • Merchandise from the recipient’s favorite coffee shop. Many small shops have hoodies, tumblers, and hats. If yours doesn’t offer merch, try a gift card instead.
  • Thanks a Thousand. A fun book that starts as a journey of thanking everyone involved in the process of making your morning cup of coffee, from the farmers to the chemists to the artists to the truckers. It contains a larger message of gratitude and hope. A great read for anyone who hates when you tell them “coffee isn’t that deep.”
  • A framed coffee print. Buy an instant digital download from Etsy and then have it printed at your local print shop. Put it all together with a frame from a local craft store. Check out this informative print, this aesthetic print, and this funny one.

For the Creators, Builders, and Entrepreneurs

  • Show Your Work. A book by Austin Kleon about how to share your work online. Filled with helpful tips, fun graphics, and black-out poems, it’s a great choice for the creative in your life who needs an extra push of encouragement. Kleon is both an artist and an author, giving him a unique perspective into the life of a creative.
  • Access to an Online Learning Community. There are tons of creators building online communities right now. My favorite, Ness Labs, is an awesome platform for people to share ideas, ask questions, and meet up with each other. The founder, Anne-Laure Le Cunff, explores mindfulness and productivity in her content. Membership starts at $5 a month or $50 for a year.
  • Think Outside the Odds. A book that tells the diverse stories of underdog entrepreneurs whose disadvantages fueled their innovation. It’s currently available for preorder with an invitation to join an online community and get a behind-the-scenes peek into the making of a book. Great for anyone who is curious about the book-writing and/or innovation process (disclaimer: this is my own book).
  • A grown-up coloring book. This is a great gift for that one friend who loves art but is horrible (you’d never tell them) at drawing. I love this Harry Potter one.

For the Wanna-Be Plant Parent

How we used plants in bottles for our decor at home.
  • Plants in bottles. Head to your local dollar store (or your recycling bin) for some small glass bottles. Fill them with water and plants. We used sample drink bottles from airplanes and indoor air plants that don’t need soil to survive. These are low-maintenance (water them once every few weeks), aka perfect for your friend whose plants are always dying, and make adorable room decor.
  • Paint a pot. If you’re feeling artsy, pick up a clay pot from your local craft store and paint it. Something as simple as color blocking can make the receiver feel special.
  • A framed plant print. Buy an instant digital download from Etsy and then have it printed at your local print shop. Put it all together with a frame from a local craft store. Check out this minimalist print and this text one.

For the Everyone Else

  • A personalized video of their favorite celebrity wishing them happy holidays. This is made possible through online platform Cameo. Many of the personalities offer 1-day delivery, including Perez Hilton and Howie Day.
  • A gift card for a local place. Do they have a favorite museum? Which shops remind you of them? Where do you guys spend the day out together? Are there any places nearby that offer experiences centered around their hobbies (ie. a wine and paint night)?
  • Tiny Trinkets Box. Head to your local dollar store or Five Below and pick up any small items that remind you of them. Arrange them nicely inside a box. Some things to look for include stickers, bookmarks, mugs, accessories, and home decor.
  • Online Classes. Get them a gift card or subscription to an online class platform. This is great for someone who loves picking up niche skills. ClassPass offers dozens of fitness classes. MasterClass has awesome classes taught by celebrities and experts in everything from writing to cooking to negotiation. MasterClass is an especially cool choice if you can find their favorite idol/celebrity/personality teaching a class on the platform.
  • A gift card to a subscription box service. There’s one for everyone! Some cool ones include CauseBox (a box of socially conscious products) and The Beautiful Book Company (a box of books personalized to the recipient).

If you enjoyed reading this, I’d love to have you on my newsletter, Caffeine for Your Inbox, where I send out weekly tidbits on living a more intentional, innovative life. I’ll send you free Notion templates for your weekly dashboard, journal, and to-do lists as a token of thanks.
Caffeinate Your Inbox
vedikadayal
vedikadayal October 18, 2020
Innovation

Design Thinking, Meet Social Innovation.

Photo by Geraldine Lewa on Unsplash
Photo by Geraldine Lewa on Unsplash

If you’ve ever tried to reason with a screaming baby, you’ll know what most design thinkers know: some problems are plain wicked.

In design jargon, “Wicked Problems” (a term coined by theorist Horst Rittel) refers to problems that are multi-dimensional, hard to solve, and require collaboration.

Many of the issues facing our world today are wicked, from systemic racism to climate disruption to a global pandemic. They’re deeply complicated, and though scholars and ordinary people alike have pored over them for hours, there seems to be no clear-cut solution in sight.

One of the largest barriers facing socially responsible innovation is that we’re treating wicked problems as non-wicked. The simplification of complex social issues at best preserves the status quo. At worst, it aggravates the problem.

But there’s a way of thinking that’s been formulating over the years that’s designed precisely to tackle wickedness. Design thinking is the emerging field that addresses our need for disruptive innovation right now. To begin implementing design thinking in our approach to socially responsible innovation we need to reflect on three key things: 1) how we speak, 2) how we collaborate, and 3) how we create.

Speak

It’s only been five paragraphs, but I’ve already violated a key design thinking principle: don’t think in terms of solutions.

Finding solutions to something as vast as world hunger is intimidating, to say the least. What’s less intimidating? “Never before seen” ideas, or NBS for short. Because the problems we’re dealing with are so complex, and the concepts we’re grappling with so new, we have to treat our ideas as they are: points for experimentation instead of keys for locks.

When we change the way we talk about what we’re looking for, it becomes less intimidating to begin working on an approach.

In one study conducted by Bryan Lawson, a professor at the University of Sheffield, a group of postgraduate scientists and architects were given an arbitrary problem to solve with colored blocks. While the scientists spent their time trying to theorize on which arrangement of blocks would lead to the most optimal solution, the architects began experimenting with different arrangements and then checking to see if their creation happened to fit the requirements.

The scientists were looking for a solution. The architects were looking for an idea. Predictably, the architects performed better.

The problem with talking about solutions becomes even more apparent when you take a tangible issue, like world hunger. World hunger has the benefit of being a non politically divisive issue, but this means that many governments and organizations want to be the one to “solve” it.

In their attempts to find the panacea, they end up diluting the issue into terms like “food security” or “nutritional planning.” In reality, both of these approaches tackle a very small part of the issue and have led to minimal systemic change.

For true innovation to occur, we have to articulate what we’re looking for—is it a lofty, perfect arrangement or many arrangements to experiment and learn from?

Collaborate

Even within our own brains, traditional frameworks of thinking don’t encourage collaboration.

We have a left brain and a right brain—two halves that operate independently with separate functions. The right brain is for imagination and creativity while the left brain is for analysis and logic. This way of thinking carries over into how we interact with others. Mathematicians work with mathematicians, artists work with artists.

But some of the most innovative approaches to social issues have come from collaboration across these lines. One example is New Story. The New Story founders saw that many nonprofits were trying to tackle homelessness through solutions like immediate disaster relief.

The problem was that disasters kept happening.

New Story’s founding team (Brett Hagler, Alexandria Lafci, Matthew Marshall, and Mike Arrietta) had four people from backgrounds in tech, design, finance, and the humanities. Their solution was providing 3D printed homes to people with no shelter.

Recently, they were named one of “Fast Company World’s Most Innovative Companies.” Out-of-the-box solutions need out-of-the-box teams.

Create

Design thinking is, at its core, about humans. It’s about creating with the end-user in mind. But when it comes to socially responsible innovation, that end-user often gets swallowed up in competing priorities—priorities like facade and effort.

It’s why the trend of greenwashing has emerged, which is when companies attempt to seem more environmentally friendly than they actually are. Companies want easy fixes to difficult problems, so they create a facade of sustainability.

The people that are rarely being talked to? The actual beneficiaries.

It’s also why some corporations are trying to “fight systemic racism” by donating tenths of percents of their annual revenues to the movement, instead of speaking to their Black employees about their experiences working at the office.

What we need is a refocus on the people our ideas are trying to serve. Speaking with them, understanding their perspectives, and creating with their stories in mind is how innovation can foster more systemic change.

We must ask ourselves, who do we create for?

Final Thoughts

It’s 2020. The world is revealing the true wickedness of the social issues we have been grappling with for years. California blue skies are turning red. People of color are dying from hatred. Universal challenges like public health and pandemics are becoming foundations for polarization and divide.

What we’ve learned so far? These issues are too complex for the standardized, simple solutions we’ve been trying for years.

The good news is that challenge, constraint, and hardship breed creativity and innovation. And the lens through which we can begin to tackle and dismantle these issues is design thinking.

So, think back to that screaming baby flailing in your arms. Will you just stick a pacifier in their mouth or are you and the baby ready for a change?

If you enjoyed reading this, I’d love to have you on my newsletter, Caffeine for Your Inbox, where I send out weekly tidbits on living a more intentional, innovative life. I’ll send you free Notion templates for your weekly dashboard, journal, and to-do lists as a token of thanks.
Caffeinate Your Inbox

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