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SIN and SYNTAX

An online salon for those who love wicked good prose.
Edited by Constance Hale
The answer to writers block: big courage

February 8th, 2010 by Constance Hale

In my last post, I wrote about seeing a performance of Mozart Dances by the Mark Morris Dance Group. A few days before that performance at the Boston Opera, I listened in on a conversation between Morris and Richard Dyer, a former music critic for the Boston Globe, which took place at Harvard University’s Sanders Theatre. I reported on that conversation with a group of Tweeting journalists #markmorris. Check it out!

My ears perked up when a dance teacher asked the choreographer whether he ever feared being blocked, and what he did when he “dried up.” Morris described being creatively blocked as a kind of occupational hazard: “Successful artists always have this certain fear of being discovered to be a true charlatan,” he said.

Morris’s advice to those who find themselves blocked: “Just make up a dance a day. Change it. Then make its opposite. Then throw them both away. Watch something else. Make another dance. Read more books and learn more music.

“My courage is bigger than my fear,” Morris added. “But I have big courage.”

We can’t all have courage as big as Morris’s, but we can cultivate it. There are two other important kernels in his advice: First, don’t let your inner critic stop you from making more art. Just keep making things. Second, don’t stop reading and learning—connect with the things about your art that you love, and that set you on fire.

Related posts:

  1. Unblocking writers block
  2. Mozart, Morris, and strange metaphors

Posted in Blog | 2 Comments »


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2 Responses

  1. R. Bettmann Says:

    That’s great… even if we ‘know’ these things, hearing them from people we respect is somehow validating.

  2. Unblocking Writer's Block | Sin and Syntax Says:

    [...] do you do when your creative juices freeze up? I like the advice Mark Morris gives, mentioned in the previous post. Just start working, thinking about why you love writing rather than the fearsome task ahead. Just [...]

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