Some writers don't believe in writer's block--that stall out, mind- and spirit-numbing experience that occasionally visits us when we're plowing ahead on a book deadline or trying to bring a new character to life. But I do. I've had it, I've coached dozens of writers through it, and it's a real phenomenon.
Recently, I read a wonderful interview in Lit Hub on the writer George Saunders. You might be a great fan of Saunders, as I am (his collection of stories, Tenth of December, is some of the quirkiest, most amazing writing I've ever read), or his fiction might be new to you. His opinion about writer's block is equally inspiring. It's a bar set too high, he says. It's about the writer, not the writing. Always.
Ira Glass, the well-known host and producer of "This American Life," speaks of it as the distance between our taste and our abilities: