I'm probably a little unusual in that I'd actually pay to have someone cracking the whip behind me (stop sniggering at the back, Colin) while I write. There is this strange belief in some writers that what they do is exempt from what works for just about every other form of creativity, which is to make sure you get constant, incisive feed-back. Better still, to get regular coaching and mentoring. Gathering a few basic critiques from other writers is not really good enough. Mainly this is because the etiquette that tends to prevail is determined along the lines of "I won't give you too much hard work to do as long as you don't give me any either."
The fact is, we're all lazy and always underestimate what we can achieve. So, when we set our own obstacle courses - which is what writers do in effect - we tend to make sure the barbed wire fence is only 18 inches high, and the mud in the drop pool is not too deep or too cold, and the pack we have to carry is only ten pounds in weight because, after all, we don't want to risk back strain in later life, do we?
We also convince ourselves that we must spend long periods lying on the sofa, giving inspiration the chance to tickle our creative fancies (which my partner cruelly insists on calling 'taking a kip'
, when just about every other field of the arts recognises that the best way to produce new work is to get working.
All of which, I believe, makes us reluctant to explore possibilities. For example, a friend read a story of mine the other day, one that's already been sold to a SF magazine but which will need a bit of editing before it's published. This friend is a business coach and is used to finding lots of different ways of getting the best out of his clients. So, while he said he really liked the story, he also gave me several ideas for how it could go. He wasn't being critical - just reacting to what he'd read. I found myself a little reluctant to take on board what he was saying, but then realised it was just that traditional writer's laziness - "Hey! This could mean more work . . . "
Terry
<Added>Don't know where that damn smiley came from - taking a kip, sorry, waiting for inspiration to stir one's creative loins, is no laughing matter.