Article By Jami Gold

Minutes Read Time

Huge cloud of smoke behind car "burning out" with text: Is Burnout Clouding Your Writing Career?

I’ve written before about the problems of burnout, but gee, the topic is still relevant because those problems don’t go away. In fact, if we don’t deal with burnout, the problems are likely to get worse.

As writers, we can burn out in many different aspects of our lives. We can experience it personally, day-job professionally, writing-wise, publishing-wise, or all of the above.

In other words, it’s more of a surprise if we never burn out. Let’s take a look…

We Can Burn Out on Our Story

We might become sick of our story during drafting or editing. During drafting, we can be discouraged by slow progress and feel the temptation to shove the story into a drawer.

Likewise, the revising and editing process requires us to read through a story multiple times, and by the time our editing is done, we may hate our story. Don’t worry, this is normal.

We Can Burn Out on Our To-do Lists

To-do lists can threaten to drown us not just in the publishing world but also in the rest of our lives. In our writing world, we might have lists of goals for word count, revisions, submitting to agents, finding a cover artist, release day, promotion efforts, etc., etc.

But we also all have personal lists or calendars for our normal day-to-day tasks and deadlines (and maybe our day job too). It’s not unusual to get so overwhelmed or pulled in so many directions that we don’t know where to start, and thus we make no progress at all.

We Can Burn Out on Our Goals

Between negative feedback, rejections, bad reviews, and low sales, there’s no shortage of discouragement in a writing career. We can easily think that if we don’t feel a compulsion to persevere every day, maybe we’re not “cut out” to be a writer and should give up.

But having a bad day or month or decade doesn’t determine what we’re allowed to do tomorrow. We’re allowed to take breaks, recover, and choose to get back to our goals later.

We Can Burn Out on Our “Should” Expectations

When we first start writing, we’re faced with a huge learning curve. And with few ghost-writing exceptions, we’re solely responsible for learning the craft (because Matrix-style mental downloading of expertise doesn’t yet exist—darn it!).

As our learning process progresses to the other stages of publishing, we might keep the same expectations of what we “should” do and resist asking for help, even though help is not only available for later stages (self-publishing, promotion, etc.) but is often essential (beta readers/critique feedback) for our success. Advice is all-too-eager to tell us everything we “should” be doing (“Write every day!” “Attend this marketing webinar!” “Participate in this Twitter pitch party!”), leaving us feeling like a failure when we inevitably fall short.

We Can Burn Out on Our Publishing Schedule

Every so often, writers debate how important fast writing is to success. Some authors try to release a book every few months (or even one a month) to stay relevant and active in readers’ minds.

But while we might be able to keep up a punishing schedule for a short period (such as the word count goals of NaNo month), that’s not sustainable over the long term. Unless we have no passion for writing and are just in it for the short-term money, it’s better to come up with a sustainable long-term plan for our career schedule.

We Can Burn Out on Our Obligations

People are always going to want more from us than we can give. Whether we get requests to lead an event an our kid’s school or to beta read for a fellow writer, there’s no shortage of people asking for favors from us.

I’ve said before that I have several days worth of stuff to do in each 24-hour day, and that math just doesn’t work. Burnout is inevitable if we don’t set boundaries for what we say “yes” to. We have to learn to say “no.”

We Can Burn Out on Our Creativity

Writers often talk about the problem of writer’s block, stuck on a blank page and unable to think of what should come next. Or we might feel like we used up all the words and ideas in our head—especially after a big push, such as with NaNoWriMo.

Either way, our creative well can feel dry, leaving us bereft of ideas. Writing is art, and sometimes we need to replenish our well of creativity.

We Have Permission

Whatever the source, it’s normal for writers to feel burnout. We shouldn’t feel guilty for such a normal experience. We have permission to feel—without shame—discouraged, unmotivated, or that it’s hard to measure up.

For writers, burnout is far too common, but we can work to fix it. Click To TweetBut for all its normality, we don’t want to accept that burned-out status forever. We want to establish realistic expectations to escape feeling like a failure.

At the same time, we have to deal with our burnout because our burnout won’t fix itself. And unless we take action, our burnout will prevent us from accomplishing as much as we could.

Obviously, it does no one any good to bury our potential under mental charcoal. So we also have permission to take action to fix our burnout—even if the action affects others.

Fixing Our Burnout

I’ve written before about 12 ways we can recover from burnout (roughly in order of light to deep recovery strategies):

  • Sleep: Deep sleep is most helpful.
  • Relaxing/Socializing: In my case, this often translates to playing on Twitter. *smile*
  • Replenish the Words: Do activities that fill us up again and give our muse new ideas, such as reading for pleasure, watching TV/movies, or listening to music.
  • Exercise: Get the blood moving.
  • Explore Other Creative Outlets: Gardening, painting, etc.
  • Be Mindless: Wash dishes, do laundry, vacuum, etc.
  • Change the Scenery: Try writing in a different location: at a cafe, in a park, etc.
  • Rediscover the Passion: Remind ourselves why we want this career, such as by rereading the story that first made us want to be a writer or by reading one of our own stories for pleasure.
  • Resolve to Cut Back: Sometimes our dread of upcoming stresses makes us feel burned out before we even start. Try eliminating some of those stresses.
  • Take a Vacation: Ditch the kids at the grandparents for a weekend for a stay-cation or get away and have new experiences.
  • Identify Our Blocks: If we’re feeling negative about doing writing of any sort, there’s usually an underlying reason (resentment, self-doubt, depression, etc.).
  • Evaluate Priorities: Are we happy with our current path, or do we need to change our approach? Are our deadlines the career equivalent of busywork, or will they help us achieve our goals?

But sometimes long-term chronic problems cause long-term burnout that can’t be helped by those types of solutions because the problem is ongoing. We can feel drained before we even start—simply because there is no end in sight.

In the case of long-term burnout—in addition to prioritizing self-care, changing our definition of success, and touching base with our passions as much as possible—we likely need to make permanent (or semi-permanent) changes to our priorities and schedule.

My Struggle with Long-Term Burnout

Those of you who follow my blog know that most of 2016 and 2017 were a struggle for me. My health was a huge factor in that struggle, as I fell victim to not one but two(!) antibiotic-resistant infections, needed surgery to undo a year’s worth of work on my jawbone after a second failure, and suffered dozens of setbacks.

Between my insane publishing schedule in 2015 followed by a year and a half of health issues, it’s been nearly impossible for me to avoid burnout—in every “flavor” listed at the top of this post. Depression has lurked in the wings of my mental attitude for far too long, and the spoon theory has become far too relevant to my life.

Solving the problem of long-term burnout requires bigger changes. Click To TweetAs I mentioned in my post about chronic problems and burnout, part of my burnout has centered on my blog, as it takes a lot of hours every week. Given my tendency to write long 2000+ word articles, each post takes me 5-8 hours, often forcing me to shortchange my sleep, which then negatively affects my energy the next day. In other words, each post takes a day to write and, far too often, a day to recover.

With my burnout, that means most of my productivity writing-wise has been taken up by my blog, and I haven’t been able to focus on fiction writing nearly enough. So I’ve been trying to figure out for about a year how I can reduce the amount of time this blog takes from me.

I put off any decisions for a while, hoping the slight improvements in my health would help my burnout clear up on its own, but so far, that hasn’t been the case. So I’m making a slight change to my blog schedule for (at least) the next three months to see if that “reboots” me and helps me write fiction again. *smile*

Announcement: Changing My Blogging Schedule

For the past 7 years and 10 1/2 months, I’ve been posting new content twice a week—every Tuesday and Thursday. Between the actual writing and the lack-of-sleep recovery, that eats up 4 days a week. Again, not a surprise that I’m burned out.

So I’m following the advice on realistic expectations from Jenna Victoria, guest poster and metastatic triple negative breast cancer patient, who shared her tips last year for how to write despite… whatever:

Being realistic isn’t defeatist. It is matching your current abilities to your goals. This is a good thing.”

Starting next week—and continuing at least for June, July, and August—my blogging schedule will be as follows:

  • Tuesdays: New blog content like usual.
  • Thursdays: Sharing other content:
    • guest posts,
    • rerunning older posts,
    • favorite post I discovered online that week,
    • linking to all the writing-related posts I tweeted about that week,
    • etc., etc.

As a teacher at heart, I love sharing what I’ve learned, so this isn’t about me wanting to quit blogging entirely. (I have too much to say! *grin*) I just want to reduce the time I spend on my blog by limiting myself to Thursday posts that require fewer than 750 words of new writing.

And yes, I’m going to feel guilty about potentially “letting you down.” But I’m hoping that by announcing the change—and the reasons behind it—I can avoid enough guilt that the end result is positive for helping my burnout. *smile*

Have you ever suffered from burnout? What style(s) of burnout did you suffer from? Can you think of different styles of burnout? How did you deal with your burnout? Do you have advice to add?

P.S. And let me know if you have an idea for a guest post! *grin*

Originally Posted on May 31, 2018
Categories: News, Writing Stuff

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