How to Inspire Your Writing… Now!

by Joe Bunting | 89 comments

Free Book Planning Course! Sign up for our 3-part book planning course and make your book writing easy. It expires soon, though, so don’t wait. Sign up here before the deadline!

Bryan_HutchinsonThis guest post is by motivational and inspirational writer, Bryan Hutchinson. Bryan is the author of Positive Writer, where he shares encouraging messages about writing and creativity. In his spare time, Bryan enjoys exploring castles across Europe with his wife and best friend, Joan Faith. You can follow Bryan on Twitter and Facebook.

There have been too many days when I didn't know what to write about. I sat here waiting… waiting… waiting, but nothing came to me.

I used to think that some mornings I just wasn't meant to write anything. Inspiration did not visit me, and instead I wasted hours drinking cold coffee while staring blankly at my computer screen.

Well, frankly, that sucked. So I started something new.

Writer's Challenge

Provided by Dreamstime.com

Now when I am totally stuck, instead of waiting for inspiration to strike, I pick a random quote and start writing about it.

I love quotes. Who doesn't?

Here’s today’s quote:

Argue for your limitations and sure enough, they’re yours.

~Richard Bach (Tweet This Quote)

You’re better than you think you are. It doesn’t matter where you are in your life right now you were meant for more!

You are more.

The human spirit within you urges you every morning to get up and create something, anything, and you want to.

You need to.

The problem comes when you don’t think you have anything to write, paint or design that matters. That whatever you create won’t be good enough, accepted or appreciated.

When those thoughts start to take root and turn into beliefs nothing anyone says will change your mind. You start feeling lesser than others, incapable of being more, and you start to believe that you will never achieve greatness.

The fact is: that’s not true.

But I am not here to convince you. I am here to help you realize:

Whatever you argue for will be (and is) true for you. (Tweet This)

If you think you’re not good enough, if you think you can’t create something that matters and if you believe in your heart of hearts no one will appreciate your work, well, then, that’s your reality.

So consider this:

If you think you are good enough, that you can create something that matters, and you believe in your heart of hearts that people will appreciate your work, well, then that’s your reality.

You choose.

Every day you must make this choice, so why not make it a good one?

What do you choose to argue for today? Share in the comments.

You are awesome! (By you, I do mean, you!) Believe it. It's true.

PRACTICE

Pick a random quote and write a blog post about it.

Then come back here and share the link to it in the comments. Or, if you're not a blogger, write about a quote in the comments. We’d love to read it.

(Also, feel free to use the picture above for your post.)

Free Book Planning Course! Sign up for our 3-part book planning course and make your book writing easy. It expires soon, though, so don’t wait. Sign up here before the deadline!

Joe Bunting is an author and the leader of The Write Practice community. He is also the author of the new book Crowdsourcing Paris, a real life adventure story set in France. It was a #1 New Release on Amazon. Follow him on Instagram (@jhbunting).

Want best-seller coaching? Book Joe here.

89 Comments

  1. LuVen

    “There’s nothing you can do that can’t be done
    There’s nothing you can sing that can’t be sung
    Nothing you can say, but you can learn to play the game
    It’s easy”

    Before I started taking writing more seriously, I always thought arts is about
    transmitting unique ideas, ideas that change mankind and their perceptions,
    ideas that shape the new world of tomorrow, making people more sensitive to the realities of their fellow men and women.
    With arts, you feel deep and you think big.
    But the reality, when you sit on your bud for hours, trying to put on paper one tiny, little sparkle of genius idea, is very different.

    In the morning I wake up, motivated maybe by a dream or some episode my brain put in order during my sleeping hours, and I feel like fire and flame to get it out and into the world. But once that first writing urge is released, and I have to revise what I just wrote before publishing, doubts start crawling towards me,
    like ghost-zombies. They approach me like shadows, from the corners of my room, start climbing my legs, immobilize my body, get into my head and are longing for my heart, darkening everything.
    Where do the zombie-doubts come from?
    It’s the knowledge, that the genius idea I am just working on has already been covered by that famous author I read last year or by a newspaper article that falls into my hands just a few hours after putting the last full stop on my text.
    It’s my younger brother answering sober, that this is sort of the same idea one
    of the old Greek philosophers was pounding about for years. Nothing is new;
    everything has already been there thousands, maybe millions of times. Nearly
    everyone has had this idea before once or several times in their lifetimes.
    I feel like a failure.

    But then, …
    “all you need is love. ♫ Tatatarará. All you need is love. ♪ Tatatarará. All
    you need is love, love. Love is all you need.♫”
    Lennon should have changed some parts of the choruses to “all you need is faith”, meaning faith in yourself and love for your work. Because it is true… you have to learn how to play the game. It’s a craft, therefore a lot of work to master it. You have to learn how to express one thought, which has been thought all over millions, trillions of times before in a way that is non-superficial, hiking the depths, pounding the vein of your zeitgeist, reaching out to your readers, who actually have millions and trillions of these thoughts every day, but who generously will accept to stop for a minute in their train of life, to grant that one specific idea a few minutes more, and maybe, that can change their perspectives and their lives a tiny, little, sparkling bit.

    Like Walt Whitman said: “The powerful play goes on, and you can contribute a verse”.

    Thank you Brian for this charming inspiration!

    My blog: http://balladofaseeker.blogspot.com/2013/05/all-you-need-is.html

    Reply
    • CharlotteHall

      I think you just put all the problems I have ever had with writing into *words*. Wow. I didn’t think that was possible. 🙂

    • LuVen

      haha, thank you. so nice to hear that.

    • Bryan Hutchinson

      You said it: “Faith in yourself and love for your work.” that’s what living one’s passion is all about.
      – You’re welcome 🙂 and thank you, too!

    • Sharon Rose Gibson

      Wow, you, my friend are a creative good writer! I teach creative writing and especially love it when I come across a writing treat such as yours. This is definitely going in my good writing file. 🙂
      I can so relate to the fear that you don’t have anything new to say. I have the same problem in writing my current book.
      But my friend, you just did it. You had a whole new way of expressing doubts which gave me a greater and more indepth understanding of what happens to me. have a new understanding of

      The next time those zombie doubts crawl up your legs, you scream at them, “I am a creative, good writer. Someone saw something in a fresh new way they’ve never seen before because of my writing. Those zombie

    • The Striped Sweater

      I’ve come to the conclusion that even though timeless truths may stay the same, people change. Each generation needs new symbols. Plato or Aristotle may have said it first, but they used language and symbols from their own time and experience. Their experience is not as close to mine as yours is. We are contemporaries, so even if you say the same thing, if you say it in a new way, it will resonate with me in a different way than old writers will.

    • LuVen

      haha, you really made me laugh. That was a gorgeous and witty ride. Didn’t thought of making a real story out of this exercise… Damn! Very classy! I will keep it in mind for next time. I prefer stories to essays…

    • CharlotteHall

      Thank you! 🙂

      Stories are definitely better than essays, I agree.

    • Bryan Hutchinson

      I agree, too! Loved it! Keep writing.

    • CharlotteHall

      Thanks! 🙂

    • Jay Warner

      light hearted and entertaining about a potentially un-lighthearted subject! I really enjoyed reading about your “near-death” and the accompanying quote. I look forward to reading more of your work.

    • CharlotteHall

      Thanks! 🙂

    • The Striped Sweater

      Love the twist.

    • CharlotteHall

      Thank you 🙂

    • Annmarie Miles

      ohh you turned a corner real quick there – loved it.
      You know you have to write that full story now don’t you… 😀

    • CharlotteHall

      Thank you. And indeed, that story will bug me until it is written.

  2. Annmarie Miles

    Would you believe I had this quote rolling around my head all week… never thought of applying it to a post tho… Here’s my ponderings 🙂 http://auntyamo.com/2013/05/25/freedom/

    Reply
    • Bryan Hutchinson

      FREEDOM! Somehow that made me think of Braveheart 🙂 Oh, those kids don’t know what they are getting into! Thanks for sharing with us, Annmarie.

    • Annmarie Miles

      I almost posted a photo of Mel Gibson in his Braveheart gear 🙂

    • Bryan Hutchinson

      lol – I’m kind of glad you didn’t 🙂

    • Jay Warner

      nicely put! Freedom comes in many forms but it’s choosing wisely that truly makes us free.

    • Annmarie Miles

      Thanks Jay 🙂 that’s it in a nutshell!

    • CharlotteHall

      Wonderful 🙂
      This is actually relevant to me at the moment as I am currently finishing off with my GCSEs, and (though I will have to do my A-levels next year) the freedom feels half exciting and half scary. I’ve had to spend a lot of time thinking over even the tiniest decisions and the largest ones, from doing five minutes of bass practice instead of revising or which Sixth Form to go to. The whole world is suddenly a dangerous place.

      Ripping pages out of books is a lot of fun!

    • Annmarie Miles

      Thanks Charlotte. The excitement of the impending freedom – which brought a whole new set of responsibilities and decisions!
      I hope it all goes well for you.

      oh and I did a bit of page ripping and BOY it felt good – even if it was in my bedroom and it all went straight into the rubbish bin 🙂

  3. Sharon Rose Gibson

    Bryan, I love the way you express things in a fresh new way which affirm me in my writing.

    My limiting thoughts have to do with, “I’m not good enough. I don’t measure up. I’m not perfect enough or say things right enough. Or what if I make too many mistakes (especially since I teach creative writing!)”

    Into this lie, you speak this truth which sets me free.
    “If you think you are good enough, that you can create something that matters, and you believe in your heart of hearts that people will appreciate your work, well, then that’s your reality.

    Your writing is like a flashlight in the dark which show me that the monsters are not really there. 🙂

    Reply
    • Bryan Hutchinson

      Hi Sharon, glad you enjoyed it. I think we all need a flashlight from time to time. The writer’s world can get dark and lonely, and every now and then we have to remember it’s what we love to do and that’s what matters!

  4. Y8 Games

    I may persist and on relating to however nice your article is, however i might rather tell you I appreciate your dedication to writing quality content.

    Reply
  5. Shelley DuPont

    Today, I went to an antique fair where I came across a woman selling books. What made them so special was they were state and local authors, among them Flannery O’Connor and Eugenia Price. What impressed me was the number of local authors that continue to write. It gave me more incentive and motivation to keep going on this path I’ve embarked on. Thoughts of doubt jump out every now and then, but not near as much as they used to.

    Reply
    • Bryan Hutchinson

      That means you are becoming stronger, more confident in who you are and your abilities. You go girl!

  6. Anne Peterson

    Great post, Bryan. I really liked how you reiterated you are what you think. And I am a writer with something of value to offer the world. I appreciated this post.

    Reply
  7. Jay Warner

    This was one assignment I found particularly interesting.
    I chose a quote by Oscar Wilde and wrote a blog post about it. You can find it at http://www.portals2stories.com/Blog.html

    Reply
    • Bryan Hutchinson

      Jay, you’re so right. There are people who give off such a vibe that you just want to go away, or, you want them to go away. I think you did the right thing because a person’s attitude can bring you down, or, it can lift you up. So it’s much better to be around those who lift you up — in another library 🙂

    • Jay Warner

      exactly, you hit the nail on the head.

    • CharlotteHall

      It’s such a shame when brilliant things, places, and people are twisted by the negativity of others, and it’s such a shame you felt the need not to go to the ibrary anymore. Libraries are certainly brilliant places. 🙂

    • Jay Warner

      I still go to libraries. I had been working at this one particular one, and because of the negativity I moved on to work somewhere else (as a writer!). The library can indeed be a brilliant place, and so often the people there can set the tone (as anywhere) with their positive energy if they choose. Some people are naturally positive, and some aren’t.

    • CharlotteHall

      Indeed. Luckily, my local library is 95 per cent full of extremely smiley people.

    • Kathleen Caron

      Jay, I loved your post and left a comment. You have a terrific blog. I wonder if you would mind an unsolicited suggestion? The spam blocker with captcha code is really hard to read, I had to try three times and almost gave up. There are spam filter plugins that are so good at weeding out spam, you don’t have to moderate comments, might be worth investigating so more people can read your thoughtful words!

  8. Kath Unsworth

    Bryan Great idea if you run out of ideas.

    Reply
    • Bryan Hutchinson

      Thanks, Kath 🙂 And I am going to work on that other post you mentioned on FB TW!

    • The Striped Sweater

      Way to go, Christa! Keep writing.

    • Bryan Hutchinson

      WoW Christa! It’s wonderful when we finally grow up by going back to what made us happy before we grew up.

    • Margaret Terry

      I love that quote Christa and have it on my wall to remind me. Loved seeing your pictures to go with your trip down memory lane – what a treasure to have those bits of your past and hold them in your hand…

    • The Striped Sweater

      Agreed!

    • Bryan Hutchinson

      Very nice, Elise, and good for you for finding a way to save and keep moving forward.

    • CharlotteHall

      A nine hour shift? I moan about doing an hour or two of exam revision! It’s inspirational to see someone with so much to do still able and willing to write, too.

    • Margaret Terry

      great quote, Elise. I loved your post so full of gratitude and positive energy – nice job!

  9. charly

    I love quotes, words or sentences that I hear, shamefully I walk around with a little notebook and write any sentence or quote that I hear, specially on internet or t.v, it can be news, movies, or porn…just kidding about this one. It does give me ideas to write about.”All God does is watch us and kill us when we get boring. We must never, ever be boring.”

    Reply
    • Bryan Hutchinson

      I have to admit, I’m a quote collector, too. It’s like an addiction. They never fail to provide me with the writing prompt I need when I am stuck.

    • charly

      I´m following you on twitter(that´s creepy, I look like a stocker) and also joined adderworld community,never been diagnosed with ADD or ADHD but I sure day dreamed a lot during highschool and maybe that´s why my grades where that bad, or maybe it was the subjects didn´t interest me. Either way, I decided to learn more about it. Get new ideas and see if I had something similar to those who where diagnosed. Maybe I´m a closet ADD.

    • Bryan Hutchinson

      You know, it’s funny you mention that, most creative type people are considered to have several of the characteristics of ADHD, but that doesn’t always mean they have ADHD. However, the strategies for people with ADHD can be very helpful! (Secret: I share those strategies in all my writings)

    • Ralph M. Rickenbach

      In the US 10% of young people are diagnosed with ADHD, in France it is less than 0.5%. We are obsessed with having conditions – and excuses.

      There is more wrong with school, the choice of subjects, the way we are trained, that we have to concentrate at a given time on a given subject, and so on. Don’t blame the faults of the system on the people having to go through it.

      Maybe we found another name for creativity because we cannot handle it. Let’s just call it ADHD.

    • charly

      Top secret, that´s why I got registered into the adderworld community. Get one of your free books. What can I say..I broke.

    • Bryan Hutchinson

      I think you just took me to school, MV! Wonderful post and so true. We all have to go through some darkness to find the light, or how else would we learn to appreciate the light? Well done. Can’t wait to read your book! Put me on your waiting list.

    • themagicviolinist

      Thanks! 😀 I’ll be posting chapters on my blog as soon as it’s done!

    • Bryan Hutchinson

      I’ll be keeping my eye out for them!

    • Bryan Hutchinson

      Meditation and mindfulness has helped me in many ways. Great post. Thanks for sharing!

    • The Striped Sweater

      Thank you.

    • Bryan Hutchinson

      Nice post, Kathleen. Listening is hard work sometimes, but the payoff is worth it. Great quote by Hemingway!

    • Kathleen Caron

      Thank you Bryan, and by the way, you are awesome.

    • Margaret Terry

      I love that Hemingway quote – not sure if I’ve seen it before and have to say after reading many articles about him as well as his books, I’d be hard pressed to seeing him as a great listener! Really enjoyed your post – loved this: “sunshine is a good disinfectant” – boy, that’s a truth…

    • Kathleen Caron

      Ha ha, me too Margaret, somehow can’t picture Hemingway hanging on your every word, much as I love his writing. Thank you for reading my post, I am so glad you liked it, that makes my day!

  10. Laura Sherman

    What a cool idea! I think of people pick a random quote and just ALLOW themselves to write about it, they could overcome their personal demons and get quite creative!

    Reply
    • Bryan Hutchinson

      I checked it out, Bob. Good for you! Keep moving forward and I’ll keep pushing 🙂

    • Bob Holmes

      You’re the bomb Bryan! Got two post there now. A much better post on the second one.

  11. David Z

    While I do have a blog, it’s more of an industry-specific thing rather than a personal one. I hope you don’t mind that I write about the quote here instead, especially because your guest post came at a personally “down” moment. (must be coincidence, fate, or something…)

    You have to accept whatever comes and the only important thing is that you meet it with courage and with the best that you have to give.

    These past few months, things (especially finances and work) haven’t been favorable for me in spite of personal efforts to improve my situation. Sometimes I ask myself if I’m doing something wrong, if I delivering what is expected of me, if I’m really doing my best, things like that.

    I came across that quote by Eleanor Roosevelt while researching online on a work-related topic. For what felt like eternity, that quote struck and froze me in my chair, staring at the screen.

    The part that especially hit me was meeting “it” with the best I have to give. I somewhat don’t know if I’m indeed giving my best, but I decided – from then on – that I’ll give it my whole mind and heart while learning and improving myself, working, trying to deliver value, etc.

    Admittedly I’m feeling desperate. But, I’ll face it with courage, too.

    Bryan, thank you for writing this post. And thank you, everyone, for sharing your other thoughts as well.

    Reply
    • Bryan Hutchinson

      I think that’s very courageous and you’ve got what it takes to make it through with your positive point of view, even though your situation isn’t the best of times.

      Thanks for sharing and best wishes.

    • Bryan Hutchinson

      Very nice Memorial Day post, Pamela! Thanks for sharing with us. Oh, and, Mr. Hutchinson? Really? I thought we weren’t doing that anymore? 🙂

    • Margaret Terry

      This was a lovely story, Pamela – thx for sharing Uncle Edward.

  12. Margaret Terry

    Hi Bryan! I have really loved reading your blog posts – your advice both practical and inspiring. (btw – I met Tom Cruise once too and he was charming, gracious and looked me in the eye the whole conversation about parenting). I don’t blog, but like you, I love quotes! In fact, I have an inspiration wall in my study that is papered with words of wisdom from other writers, sages and noteworthy types. I’ve been away a few days and am late on this practice. The quote I picked to practice on is “home is where my story begins”. Don’t know the source, but my son gave it to me on a little plaque for my desk because I write a lot about family….here’s my 15 minute practice:

    I couldn’t believe Dorothy made such bad friends to
    help her get home – one heartless, one brainless, and the other
    terrified of his own voice. I was sure Dorothy would be better off
    going it alone. How was she supposed to find her way with three such needy guys hanging off her? I was so mad at her for letting them tag along, I almost turned the TV off!

    I’m glad I didn’t.

    Turned out each of the guys already had the very thing they hoped to find and they needed Dorothy to help them realize it. And, Dorothy? If she hadn’t let them tag along, she might still be lost somewhere over the rainbow wearing those Ruby Slippers with no idea of how to use them…

    Reply
    • Bryan Hutchinson

      Fun, Margaret!

      Speaking of Oz I just watched the new movie yesterday and I liked it. It is not even close to as good as Dorothy’s, but it was good fun anyway.

      I’m glad to hear you’re enjoying my posts over on Positive Writer. 🙂 Yep, Tom wasn’t at all as I expected him to be. I rarely meet someone who takes so much time to meet everyone in the room and give each a few minutes of his time.
      Thank you!

  13. Y8

    writing and writing, how to pass it. the pain and challenge is the problem i want to pass over. thank alot

    Reply
  14. Emily

    Well, I’m trying to post this to my personal blog, but it’s not working, so here’s the text:

    This practice was given to me by The Write Practice, a website with articles for writers and writing prompts. This prompt is to pick a random quote and write about it. I picked the following quote: “If the right person finds you beautiful, you win. You win forever.” -Rainbow Rowell, author of Eleanor & Park

    I really like this quote because it goes against everything today’s society teaches us. I’m a teenager myself, and I’m not skinny. I’m not tall. I don’t wear make-up, ever, and I don’t dress like a super model. I’m okay with that. But, form what I’ve just told you, I’m the opposite of what society wants me to be. Everyone wants to be skinny, tall, blonde, pretty, and likable. But I know that, as cheesy and cliche as it sounds, it doesn’t matter what you look like, it’s who you are as a person. And so, to sum it up, this is a favorite quote of mine, however not-well-known it is, because it says that you don’t have to fit our world’s standards to be pretty and loved. You just have to find that one person who doesn’t care about what you aren’t, they love you for who you are.

    Reply
    • Bryan Hutchinson

      Beautiful, Emily. You’re the right person! Don’t ever let anyone tell you anything else.

    • Bryan Hutchinson

      WoW April, I’m glad you are okay that must have been frightening. I’ve been in such an accident, so I think I know how you feel. I was also lucky not to be injured in a life threatening way. Great post and thank you for sharing it with us.

  15. minecraft

    Inspiration did not visit me, and instead I wasted hours drinking cold coffee while staring blankly at my computer screen.

    Reply
  16. Achieve Your Best

    Great post, very inspirational, I love this topic, check http://www.findthedrive.com for more inspiration

    Reply

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Say Yes to Practice

Join over 450,000 readers who are saying YES to practice. You’ll also get a free copy of our eBook 14 Prompts:

Popular Resources

Books By Our Writers

Headspace
- J. D. Edwin
Surviving Death
- Sarah Gribble
3
Share to...