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Q&A Could I have a writing phobia?

My Personal Experience with Copy-Phobia I know exactly what you're talking about. Because I had exactly the same thing. For example, I love the video game Dark Souls 3 very much, and I took it as...

posted 8y ago by Daniel Cann‭  ·  last activity 5y ago by System‭

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#3: Attribution notice added by user avatar System‭ · 2019-12-08T05:44:12Z (almost 5 years ago)
Source: https://writers.stackexchange.com/a/25213
License name: CC BY-SA 3.0
License URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
#2: Initial revision by user avatar Daniel Cann‭ · 2019-12-08T05:44:12Z (almost 5 years ago)
## My Personal Experience with Copy-Phobia

**I know exactly what you're talking about.**

Because I had exactly the same thing. For example, I love the video game _Dark Souls 3_ very much, and I took it as inspiration for my own writing. I heavily inspired a character arc based of 'Anri of Astora', but I didn't exactly copy it or steal it. I kept thinking that my writing was too similar because I was taking too much inspiration, and critics would jump all over me if I ever got it published.

However, as I started to write, and I continued to write, I realised that my work became more disconnected from it and realised that perhaps I shouldn't have been scared.

Let me give you another real example. This is likely what is going on with you, because you sound like you are currently viewing your inspiration as you try to write.

**I hold Justin Cronin's The Passage and the rest of the series very close to my heart.** Obviously, because of that, I took loads of inspiration from it. I thought that 'oh my god, I have the same kind of foreshadowing' and 'oh my god, I have _unnamed_ that's similar to The Twelve'. I had these thoughts and feelings _while I was reading the series_. The second I finished the trilogy, a few months after that of continued work on my writing, I realised that actually, my work wasn't that similar. I realised that because I'd taken so much inspiration from so many sources it couldn't possibly be similar.

I actually think a lot of that happened while I couldn't differentiate between _copying_ and _inspiration._

## How Not to Have Copy-Phobia

My main point is:

> Take inspiration from many sources. Mix, create, devise, just throw in tons of inspiration. It'll be great!

And then, just write. **Do not** think you can get past this problem without actually writing. You are going to have to write at some point, and from writing, you will come to the realisation that you are not copying exactly and your work is fine. I know you will because _I did_.

Here's another thing that has happened in my personal experience with a similar problem to the one you have:

> Read something, and later read something better. It almost always happens.

I think that's self explanatory enough.

## The Big Question

> How do I know that if I start writing, I won't just be copying? How can I actually start writing?

Okay, _there isn't really a way around this_. But seriously. As long as your not copying these things:

- Names
- Exactly copying story arcs
- Place names
- Basically copying it exactly

You're fine. I think that just because this work was groundbreaking, doesn't necessarily mean that you have to copy it precisely to make yours groundbreaking. Taking inspiration from something is totally fine.

You need to just write. I cannot stress this enough: **it is fine to take inspiration!!!**

I hope my personal experience with this problem helped you. Trust me, _you will overcome it. You'll realise it as you write. I don't believe you can realise this before writing, you can only realise it during writing._ By the way, please leave a comment telling me what that groundbreaking work is. I'm really interested now and want to read it. I might even take a bit as... **inspiration!** :P

* * *

**Edit:**

As Thomas Myron said, just write anything. You ought to get yourself used to writing and used to the thought of inspiration and copying. Just write your fears, perhaps even write what you did today. A great way to be able to actually bring yourself to start is to be really into writing, having the ability to see your own writing and realise that its fine and groundbreaking in its own way.

Another good technique that Thomas didn't mention is to **OBSESS** over what you're writing. This is really good because it helps you get into your _own_ ideas and story rather than _someone else's_.

Also, you could get some more insight from: [What are some tricks for managing debilitating writing anxiety/phobia?](https://writers.stackexchange.com/questions/14085/what-are-some-tricks-for-managing-debilitating-writing-anxiety-phobia)

#1: Imported from external source by user avatar System‭ · 2016-11-12T15:09:46Z (about 8 years ago)
Original score: 3