What to Do When You Have Creative Block (8 Proven Ways to Get Unstuck)

By: Adrian Solis

Last Updated: April 2026

You sit down to create—and nothing happens.

No ideas. No energy. Just resistance.

You try to push through it. Maybe you open a new tab, scroll for inspiration, reorganize your workspace… anything except actually creating.

This is creative block. And despite how it feels, it’s not a sign that something is wrong with you.

It’s a signal.

In this guide, you’ll learn:

  • what creative block actually is
  • why it happens
  • and 8 simple ways to get unstuck—without forcing yourself

What Creative Block Really Is

Creative block isn’t a lack of ideas.

It’s a mismatch between:

  • your mental state
  • your expectations
  • and your environment

Most people think:

“I just need more discipline.”

But creative work doesn’t respond well to pressure.

It responds to:

  • clarity
  • space
  • and the right internal conditions

Why You Feel Stuck (Common Causes)

Before fixing it, you need to understand it.

Here are the most common reasons creative block happens:

1. Mental overload

Too many inputs → no space for output

2. Perfectionism

You’re editing before you even start

3. Burnout

You’re trying to create without energy

4. Lack of clarity

You don’t know what the next step is

5. Pressure to perform

You’re focused on outcome, not process

The Key Shift

Instead of asking:

“How do I force myself to create?”

Ask:

“What’s preventing creativity from happening naturally?”

This changes everything.

8 Proven Ways to Get Unstuck

1. Lower the bar (a lot)

Your brain is resisting because the task feels too big.

Instead of:

  • “Write something great”

Try:

  • “Write one bad paragraph”

Progress removes pressure.

2. Change your environment

Creative block is often context-based

Try:

  • moving rooms
  • going outside
  • changing lighting

Even small shifts can reset your brain.

3. Do a 10-minute reset

Before creating, pause.

Try:

  • deep breathing
  • sitting quietly
  • stepping away from screens

This reduces mental noise and restores clarity.

4. Start messy on purpose

Perfectionism kills momentum.

Give yourself permission to:

  • write badly
  • sketch loosely
  • create without structure

Clarity comes after movement.

5. Break the task down

Instead of:
“Finish project”

Try:
“Write outline”
“Draft intro”
“List ideas”

Smaller steps reduce resistance.

6. Remove inputs

If you’ve been:

  • scrolling
  • consuming
  • researching

Stop.

Creativity needs space, not more input.

7. Use constraints

Too much freedom creates paralysis.

Try:

  • set a timer (20 minutes)
  • limit tools
  • choose one idea

Constraints create focus.

8. Walk away (strategically)

Sometimes the best move is to stop.

But not to avoid—
to reset.

Your brain continues processing in the background.

A Simple Creative Reset (Try This)

If you’re stuck right now:

  1. Close everything
  2. Sit quietly for 5 minutes
  3. Write one sentence
  4. Stop judging
  5. Continue for 10 minutes

That’s it.

FAQ


How long does creative block last?

It varies. It can last hours, days, or longer—but it usually resolves once your mental state shifts.


Is creative block normal?

Yes. Every creative experiences it. It’s part of the process, not a failure.


Should I push through creative block?

Not aggressively. Gentle action works better than force.

Final Thought

Creative block isn’t something to fight.

It’s something to understand.

When you reduce pressure, clear noise, and take small steps—
creativity returns naturally.