Also you are so right, Dragon Master...
TheDragonMaster wrote:it is hard finishing a series that you've spent so much time on. because while it's there, and unfinished, you can always count on yourself to write a little bit when your in a certain mood. i'm going through that right now with my 'The Dragon Master' series. i've spent 1.5 years on it, and i don't want to let it go. so it's not 'writer's block,' you're actually subconsciously blocking yourself from writing it because you can't let go...
This is a common thing for artists in general. Also, I know I have creative spurts. Sometimes I just work like a machine, producing for my customers with very little creative energy. While other times I get to have the luxury of what I call "play days" where I just create to my hearts content. The lull happens for lots of reasons, but with a now well-known writer like JKR, she went from being a writer one day...to what she is now...a writer who is now a household name. She's on everyone's A-list, from interviews to books signings, to all sorts of PR. This can do bizarre things to your creative streak.
I know for myself, I enjoy my solitary work...alone in my quiet studio creating. But when I have to spend a lot of time on the road selling, or if my work has been in a magazine or something, it is like an unheaval to my life. I have to go into social mode when I really prefer to be in solitary mode. Then at some point I have to step back and regain my creative juices. My issues are such small potatoes compared to JKR...in fact, I am an ant in comparison to her world, but it's the same premise.
And then back to what Dragon Master said...sometimes it's all about letting go. I have some pieces that are priced so ridiculously high just because I can't bring myself to part with them...but I can't keep them from my loyal customers either...so these types of pieces come out to shows with me, but with prices so high, they come home with me. or if they end up selling, I know they are going to a good home since I had the item priced high enough that only someone passionate about the piece would pay what I was asking. For a writer, I think you just end up leaving your work a few chapters short of being finished thus allowing yourself to hang on a little longer. It is in fact, a part of you...it's difficult to part with something that is so much the essence of whoyou are.