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Tame the Frenzy and Write More by Rochelle Melander

file000546792487It’s nervous work. The state you need to write in is the state that others are paying large sums to get rid of. — Shirley Hazard

In Organize Your Mind, Organize Your Life: Train Your Brain to Get More Done in Less Time, authors Paul Hammerness, M.D., Margaret Moore, and John Hane use research from brain science to outline a six-step plan to help people get more done. According to the authors, our fast-paced world has left most of us feeling frazzled and overwhelmed. Now instead of having to deal with the mail and a handful of phone calls, we are bombarded with incoming information in hundreds of different but all immediate forms. It’s hard to know which one to pay attention to first. No wonder it’s hard to get through the day let alone write a book and manage the world of social media.

The authors present six tools (they call them “Rules of Order”) to help people get organized and finish projects. Their tools are enormously helpful for those of us who write. Here’s a summary of their tools:

1. Tame the Frenzy. Calm one’s emotions in order to focus on a task.

2. Sustain attention. Sift through multiple demands, choose a priority, and focus on task.

3. Apply the Brakes. When we are tempted to travel off course (look a squirrel!), stop and focus on task.

4. Mold Information. Use working memory to retrieve information and use it in our work.

5. Shift Sets. The ability to be flexible in our thinking and shift our focus.

6. Connect the Dots. The ability to use all five steps above and see the big picture.

Over the next few months, I will be writing a series of articles on these tools and how they apply to the writing life. Today, I will be tackling the first tool: tame the frenzy.

What it is: This is the ability to notice and calm our emotions so that we can focus on the task at hand.

What frenzy looks like for writers: For many of us, our work is not just our work, it’s who we are. We write as an extension of our living. As we give voice to characters or explain how things work, we are figuring out the world, what we believe, and how we fit. Because of this, writers can be emotional about their writing. So many of us come to our work riddled with the three emotions that the writers of Organize Your Mind, Organize Your Life say are not helpful: anxiety, sadness, or anger. We worry about being good enough, we worry that other writers are doing better, we get sad when our work is overlooked, we get angry at those who don’t respect us, and on and on it goes. Who can write with that kind of drama playing out in our heads?

On top if that, frenzy also shows up as the nasty inner editor voice, often called “gremlins” after the 1984 movie of the same name. If you’ve ever tried to write or publish anything, you know what the frenzy sounds like: “This won’t be good enough to sell, I don’t know how to do this, no one will buy this, I’m scared, I don’t have the right words, I’m a loser, I should give up.”

How to tame it: According to the authors, the best way to tame the frenzy is to engage our pre-frontal cortex or the thinking area of the brain. If we can get our mind to put aside the feelings and focus on the writing puzzle, we can often move to step two: sustained attention.

If we cannot get our mind to stop with the shenanigans, we need tools to help our brain calm down and focus. For many of my clients, journaling tames the inner frenzy. Write one to three pages about all of the inner angst you are feeling at the moment. Commit all of your worries to the page. And, if possible, ask the journal to hold the worries (and your gremlins) until you are done writing for the day. At the end of your journaling session, move yourself to your daily writing puzzle. If you still have difficulty taming the frenzy, engaging in writing research or even doing a word or number puzzle can help kick in the pre-frontal cortex and move you toward analytical thinking.

The Writing Life. Taming the frenzy is often more than the daily task of setting aside emotions so we can work on our writing project. As writers, we need to cultivate a frenzy-free life. For me, this means creating the kinds of habits that tame the frenzy and allow me to sustain attention. So, taming the frenzy includes:

*exercise

*healthy eating

*journaling

*meditation

*acknowledging difficult emotions and practicing self-compassion

*connecting with other writers

Your turn. How do you tame the frenzy and write? Leave your brilliant ideas below!

6 Responses

  1. Beth Hoffmann

    A friend offered this tip for clearing her mind en route her bed. Maybe it would help en route a writing space. She put each item that was pleading for attention on a shelf as she passed, assuring the concern, “You wait right here, and I’ll come back for you in the morning.”
    The “trouble tree” is another image I find helpful. A man paused and touched several branches on a tree in his yard before he entered the house. When he left, he touched the branches again. A friend noticed and asked what he was doing. “I don’t want to take troubles from work in to my family, so I hang them out here on the trouble tree when I come home. Then I pick them up again on the way to work. The funny thing is, there always seem to be fewer of them to pick up than there were to hang.”

  2. Jorge Serbia

    Thanks again great tips!
    What I have to do to tame my frenzy is compartmentalize the emotions I’m feeling. Separate what belongs to my characters in the fiction I’m writing, and those that actually exist in my reality.
    So, before I try to re-write, I journal the inner angst of my story characters. It’ll calm me and focus me to write, but it’ll also give me a deeper understanding of the characters and story I am writing.

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