From what I have read and observed with my son, writing is definitely an issue for Aspergians. Though not all, here is quote and link to this very issue. My son writes beautifully but he can sit for hours before even one paragraph is done.
This was a huge issue for him in High School and not resolved either, sad to say. Wrecked his GPA, but I digress...
Quote:
Participants and Setting
Three adolescents (Peter, Alan, and Justin) participated in the study. Their scores on the Asperger Syndrome Diagnostic Scale (Myles, Bock, & Simpson, 2001) supported a diagnosis of Asperger syndrome (i.e., Asperger syndrome quotient scores of 116, 105, and 114, respectively) and each identified writing as an area of difficulty. Peter, age 13 years 6 months, attended a private school and was in the eighth grade. Alan, age 15 years 11 months, attended a public high school and was in the 10th grade. Alan received special education resource room services but attended general education classes. Justin, age 17 years 4 months, attended a private school and was in the 10th grade. Justin received all academic instruction in a small-group setting. All experimental sessions took place in a conference room near the researcher's office.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.govAnd one more link, tips for writing, you have to scroll down to see the posts, that is where the tips are
http://blogs.plos.org/neurotribesCory Doctorow's post, and this guy writes one page a day:
Cory Doctorow
Author of With a Little Help, For the Win, Makers, and Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom
Quote:
Write every day. Anything you do every day gets easier. If you’re insanely busy, make the amount that you write every day small (100 words? 250 words?) but do it every day.
Write even when the mood isn’t right. You can’t tell if what you’re writing is good or bad while you’re writing it.
Write when the book sucks and it isn’t going anywhere. Just keep writing. It doesn’t suck. Your conscious is having a panic attack because it doesn’t believe your subconscious knows what it’s doing.
Stop in the middle of a sentence, leaving a rough edge for you to start from the next day — that way, you can write three or five words without being “creative” and before you know it, you’re writing.
Write even when the world is chaotic. You don’t need a cigarette, silence, music, a comfortable chair, or inner peace to write. You just need ten minutes and a writing implement.