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Your Brain Isn’t Broken. It’s Bored.

June 7, 2026

on stale routines and tired imaginations

You think you've lost it. You haven't. You've been feeding your imagination the same thirty inputs for eight months and now it's staging a quiet protest.

Boredom looks identical to block from the inside, which is why writers keep treating it like trauma. Different problem, different fix. A bored imagination needs new inputs — not more inputs, new ones. We talk about why the same coffee shop turned on you, why your favorite three writers stopped helping, and a four-day input reset that doesn't involve a single productivity hack. The reset is curiosity, deliberately mishandled. Read something you would normally roll your eyes at. Take a walk somewhere with the wrong demographic. Eavesdrop. Take notes. The page will perk up faster than you think, because boredom heals about ten times faster than burnout.

Burnout · Boredom (the diagnostic)

Sign Burnout Boredom
Energy Empty Restless
Sleep Broken Fine
Feeling about writing Heavy, dreadful Flat, meh
What you crave Rest Novelty
Recovery time Weeks About 96 hours

The four-day input reset

  • Day 1: Read a book outside your genre. No notes, no plans. Just read.
  • Day 2: Go somewhere you normally wouldn't. Take three photos and one overheard line.
  • Day 3: Watch something with subtitles. Yes, even if you hate that.
  • Day 4: Do nothing creative for the first half. Then write 300 words on what surprised you.

Burnout is a fire. Boredom is a thermostat. Confuse them and you'll spend a week trying to rest yourself out of a problem that wanted a road trip.

— L.A. Walton, The Book Maven

From the Maven Catalog

  • Free eCourse — Refill the Well
  • Master Course — The Curious Writer
  • eBook — Inputs Out, Ideas In
  • Planner — The Curious Writer Planner

Try the four-day reset before you book another therapist appointment to talk about creative blocks. Sometimes the answer is foreign films and a long walk through the wrong neighborhood.