Flip a coin and you get either heads or tails. Point your compass North and 180 degrees below you'll see South. Go turn on the water tap and you'll have a choice between hot and cold.

Happy/sad, dirty/clean, hungry/full. Our brain, and maybe even our world, seems to like the symmetry of a perfectly matched set of opposites.

A few weeks ago I wrote an article for Marketingprofs.com: "Five Negative Thoughts That Can Sabotage Your Writing (and How to Shake Them)." The piece generated an enthusiastic response from readers, but now it's occurred to me that the mirror image of this topic is just as important.

So, looking at writing from the opposite perspective, I've now assembled "Five Positive Thoughts That Will Turbocharge Your Writing (and How to Channel Them). Read on to find out how this look at the "flip side" can help you write faster and better.

1. Writing is simply talking on paper

Imagine sitting in a coffee shop and chatting with a good friend. Do you stumble for words? Do you struggle to express yourself? Of course not! Now picture yourself standing in front of a room of 500 people without any notes. Can you talk easily now? Probably not—even if your subject is something with which you're very familiar. What's the difference? It's perception.

With a friend, you are relaxed. In front of an audience, you're worried about being judged.

And that's the problem when we write. We imagine people judging us. We worry about making mistakes. About being boring. About not succeeding.

But writing is not a mysterious, difficult process. It is simply talking on paper. Have you ever heard of anyone with talker's block? Of course not! It may help to imagine you're writing to just one person. It may also help to talk into a tape recorder for awhile. Or to type with your screen turned off (so you can't see what you're writing.)

But, mainly, you need to write. Just like you talk.

2. Writing can be done quickly, in little bits of time

You don't need great big gobs of time to write; you need snippets. This is contrary to everything you learned both in school and at work, where you were likely advised to clear massive blocks in your schedule for those big essays or important reports. (And then felt like a failure because you didn't get the work done in the allotted time.)

Writing needn't be an item on your to-do list; it can be something that accumulates, like snow. One minute the ground is bare, then there's a dusting like icing sugar on the road. Next thing you know, the snow is piling up in drifts.

Use the "hidden" time in your day to get that snowfall started. As you're walking to the elevator, or waiting for a return phone call, or waiting for a meeting to start, start jotting down words. When you become accustomed to "writing" this way, you'll find that whole sentences start springing to mind almost unbidden. Grab them!

The big secret here is to make sure that you have a good system for capturing your writing when you're not actually in front of your computer. Keep a digital recorder in your pocket. Or, if you're a non-techy type, use small notebook or even a set of index cards attached with an elastic band or bull clip. Whatever you do, don't let those precious words escape!

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Daphne Gray-Grant

Daphne Gray-Grant, a former journalist, is a writing and editing coach with an international practice. She offers a free weekly e-zine called Power Writing. For more information, visit www.publicationcoach.com.