Writer’s Block Isn’t the Enemy — It’s a Sign
Every writer I know has encountered writer’s block at one point or another. Sometimes it arrives quietly—a vague resistance when you sit down to write. Other times it slams the door shut entirely. The page stays stubbornly blank. The story that once felt vibrant suddenly goes silent.
When that happens, we tend to assume something has gone wrong.
But in my experience, writer’s block is rarely the enemy. More often, it’s a signal that something in the story—or in our approach to it—is asking for attention.
Over the years, working with hundreds of writers through my teaching and editing, I’ve noticed that writer’s block often points to one of a handful of deeper craft issues.
Sometimes the problem is structural. The story has wandered off its spine, and the writer’s intuition knows it. Picture books are especially sensitive to this: when the underlying arc isn’t clear, progress can stall quickly.
Other times the block comes from uncertainty about character. If we don’t fully understand what our protagonist wants—or what stands in their way—the narrative engine has nothing to drive it forward.
And sometimes the block has nothing to do with craft at all. It’s fear.
Fear that the idea isn’t good enough. Fear that someone else has already done it better. Fear that we might pour our hearts into a story and still hear “no.” Our creative minds are remarkably good at disguising fear as “I’m stuck.”
But here’s the encouraging truth: blocks often mean your creative instincts are doing their job. They’re asking you to slow down and listen.
Instead of pushing harder against the wall, try asking yourself a few gentle questions:
What might the story be trying to tell me?
Is there something I’m avoiding on the page?
Have I wandered away from the heart of the idea?
Often, when we approach the block with curiosity rather than frustration, the path forward reveals itself.
The next time writer’s block shows up, try greeting it as a messenger instead of a barrier. It may be pointing you toward the deeper story waiting to be told.