Avoiding Series Burnout

Avoiding Series Burnout

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This post on avoiding series burnout is meant to be both something for other writers to consider and personally therapeutic. Why? Because I am my own therapist, at times.

When I talk about burnout, I’m talking about a form of mental exhaustion brought on by a host of stressors: social, familial, medical, or work-related.

Often, all of the above.

Writers who make a living from their art are in the most danger, but even those who write as a hobby or just want a little passive income are subject to this burnout.

I’m one of those people, and if you’re reading this as a writer, you’re probably one of those people, too. The threat of burnout is a part of the process.

How does this happen? What could possibly cause a hobbyist or part-time writer to burnout?

Here’s a helpful list of crap that gums up the engine (feel free to add your own):

  • Doing too much at once (writing 3 stories while beta reading, editing for others, etc.)
  • Having a messy workspace (where did I put that scrap of paper with the important note?!?)
  • External stressors to the writing process (yardwork is the worst)
  • Taking on work that goes against values (chasing genres)
  • Feeling undervalued (reviews, reviews, reviews)
  • No or little success (those numbers look a lot like zeros)
  • No or little sleep (isn’t 2 hours enough?)
  • No or little support (hello? is anybody out there?)

Thankfully, there are a myriad of ways to combat burnout, from taking a break (a vacation, not a sabbatical) to eliminating some of the work you’re taking on to getting better sleep…somehow.

Writing a series causes its own type of burnout.

One of the problems of writing a series is that you get involved with the world you created, so much that you think it’s the only world that matters…and you do this for years. Ever wonder why it’s taken George R.R. Martin so long to spit out The Winds of Winter? Me, too.

Other ideas that might float in or out of your head and want a little attention are often put to the side, but they don’t go away. They nag, like that other dog who needs just as much love as the one with which you’re currently playing.

There is a way to avoid series burnout and not loose track of what you’re working on: write something else.

For me, this has worked before. The Transit series is huge–9 books in all–and it takes up a lot of my creative energy. Not only is there the story to tell, but a whole world to build, a language to create, lifeforms to imagine, and physics that can’t be overlooked.

When you look at something too much, details can slip out. This is why I find it necessary to shift focus a little.

Sunset on Maior Pales was written after the first Transit book, Out of Due Season. I really broke the mold with that one, which is why it’s only a novella–first person present is painfully difficult to write.

Beneath Gehenna was written after the second Transit book, Sunshine and Shadow. It’s different in tone, in voice, in theme, in genre.

Jumping into NaNoWriMo 2021 allowed me to really shift my focus from a vast undertaking (Transit has a lot of backstory that’s not in the books), to something that was fun. Thus, Beans of Anafi was born.

Now that I’ve completed the third book in the Transit series, I’ve passed it off to beta readers and taken a step back. I could jump right into the fourth book (it’s been outlined), but I feel the dread of burnout if I do so.

Hence my next two projects: a different series with a new voice and a non-fiction how-to book as my NaNoWriMo 2022 project.

It doesn’t work for all writers, but taking a hint from television will give you a clue why it’s important to shift your focus even if just for a little bit. Think of your favorite long-running television show and the actors in them. After fifteen years of doing the same thing, they often opt out or ask to be written off the show.

It’s the same with writing, I think. You need a break, especially if you’re writing a series.

At least I do…which is why I said this post is therapeutic.


Avoiding Series Burnout
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