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If the words aren't flowing, it's not a block—it's actually your nervous system running the show. When your nervous system feels unsafe, your creative energy takes a detour into survival patterns, and the symptom is that you stop writing (or don't even start).
It's not laziness, procrastination, or a lack of the right time management tool.
I share my own journey from reading about writing to finally becoming a full-time writer and coach, where I realized that when the words don't flow, it's about safety, not discipline. For a decade, I've seen that the number one reason entrepreneurs feel stuck is a nervous system response. When we feel overwhelmed, our brain removes us from the perceived threat, which often looks like starting a load of laundry or scrolling through social media.
I walk you through the four primary survival responses—fight, flight, freeze, and fawn—and share how each one manifests uniquely when you sit down to write:
Fight: Overworking, perpetual revision, and questioning everything.
Flight: The heart of procrastination, like over-planning, over-researching, and starting new projects to avoid the main one. (This was my signature response!)
Freeze: The classic overwhelmed, blank-page moment.
Fawn: People-pleasing, holding back your truth, and watering down your words to make everyone happy.
The great news is you can break this feedback loop. I introduce you to two powerful tools: The Observer Effect and The Cancel Process. The Observer Effect teaches you to pause, take an outside perspective, and simply watch your old pattern unfold without reacting, which drains its emotional power. The Cancel Process gives you an immediate way to stop a trigger—by imagining a big red X over the thought and reciting a word like "cancel" or "delete."
Creative, clear writing happens when your body feels safe enough to start. No productivity hack, system, or AI tool can fix a dysregulated nervous system. If you're ready to stop fighting yourself on the page, I invite you to explore my Living Draft Container coaching process, where we regulate first, and then we write.
Key TakeawaysWriter's block is a nervous system response to a perceived threat, not a fault in your discipline or focus.
Recognize your default survival pattern (fight, flight, freeze, or fawn) to understand how you unconsciously sabotage your writing process.
The goal is to build safety around your voice and writing process, not to force consistency or productivity.
Practice the Observer Effect to neutralize the emotional energy of old reactive patterns by watching them from a neutral, outside perspective.
Use the Cancel Process to immediately interrupt a negative thought or trigger, giving your nervous system the pause it needs to choose a response instead of a reaction.
Timestamps
00:00 Welcome to How Women Write (What to Expect)
00:29 Writer's Block Isn't Real: It's Your Nervous System
01:12 My Train Epiphany: Stop Reading, Start Writing
02:17 Safety Over Discipline: Why Procrastination Kicks In
04:50 Spot Your Pattern: Fight, Flight, Freeze & Fawn
06:55 The Observer Effect: Break the Feedback Loop
09:34 The "Cancel" Process: Stop Spirals in the Moment
11:07 The Living Draft Container: Regulate First, Then Write
12:37 Wrap-Up + How to Support the Show
Links:The Living Draft Container
Substack: Energy-First Writing
By Jacqueline FischIf the words aren't flowing, it's not a block—it's actually your nervous system running the show. When your nervous system feels unsafe, your creative energy takes a detour into survival patterns, and the symptom is that you stop writing (or don't even start).
It's not laziness, procrastination, or a lack of the right time management tool.
I share my own journey from reading about writing to finally becoming a full-time writer and coach, where I realized that when the words don't flow, it's about safety, not discipline. For a decade, I've seen that the number one reason entrepreneurs feel stuck is a nervous system response. When we feel overwhelmed, our brain removes us from the perceived threat, which often looks like starting a load of laundry or scrolling through social media.
I walk you through the four primary survival responses—fight, flight, freeze, and fawn—and share how each one manifests uniquely when you sit down to write:
Fight: Overworking, perpetual revision, and questioning everything.
Flight: The heart of procrastination, like over-planning, over-researching, and starting new projects to avoid the main one. (This was my signature response!)
Freeze: The classic overwhelmed, blank-page moment.
Fawn: People-pleasing, holding back your truth, and watering down your words to make everyone happy.
The great news is you can break this feedback loop. I introduce you to two powerful tools: The Observer Effect and The Cancel Process. The Observer Effect teaches you to pause, take an outside perspective, and simply watch your old pattern unfold without reacting, which drains its emotional power. The Cancel Process gives you an immediate way to stop a trigger—by imagining a big red X over the thought and reciting a word like "cancel" or "delete."
Creative, clear writing happens when your body feels safe enough to start. No productivity hack, system, or AI tool can fix a dysregulated nervous system. If you're ready to stop fighting yourself on the page, I invite you to explore my Living Draft Container coaching process, where we regulate first, and then we write.
Key TakeawaysWriter's block is a nervous system response to a perceived threat, not a fault in your discipline or focus.
Recognize your default survival pattern (fight, flight, freeze, or fawn) to understand how you unconsciously sabotage your writing process.
The goal is to build safety around your voice and writing process, not to force consistency or productivity.
Practice the Observer Effect to neutralize the emotional energy of old reactive patterns by watching them from a neutral, outside perspective.
Use the Cancel Process to immediately interrupt a negative thought or trigger, giving your nervous system the pause it needs to choose a response instead of a reaction.
Timestamps
00:00 Welcome to How Women Write (What to Expect)
00:29 Writer's Block Isn't Real: It's Your Nervous System
01:12 My Train Epiphany: Stop Reading, Start Writing
02:17 Safety Over Discipline: Why Procrastination Kicks In
04:50 Spot Your Pattern: Fight, Flight, Freeze & Fawn
06:55 The Observer Effect: Break the Feedback Loop
09:34 The "Cancel" Process: Stop Spirals in the Moment
11:07 The Living Draft Container: Regulate First, Then Write
12:37 Wrap-Up + How to Support the Show
Links:The Living Draft Container
Substack: Energy-First Writing