You know, that is such simple and obvious advice, but it's something I'd never even thought about before. The past umpteen years, I've been doing a few completely different types of writing, one of which benefited from constant revision i.e. whenever I got stuck moving forward, I could go back and revise as I gathered my thoughts. It didn't throw anything off, but just let me collect my thoughts and solidfy things. Obviously, it was not fiction because, returning to fiction the past few months, I've realized my former method just does not work at all. And you are right, the editing is killing the creativity. I'm really not progressing when I go back, but looking for all the flaws. Without the "whole picture" completed, my mental editor just says "this might not be good--change it" over and over
Glad if anything |'ve said is helpful.
In another thread, or maybe its this one. I wrote that you have to be willing to write the Drek and produce the stink bomb, after which you can then go back and put the puff on it. Turning your ugly duckling into a peudious flower.
Editing is vital, don't get me wrong. But it seems easier to go back and tweak thousands of words a day than it is to fire up the old creative juices and put thousands of words to processor. That's why I say don't let anyone, not even yourself, get you down.
Line by line tweaking is great. Its helpful, and if you've been away from teh story for weeks or months, maybe necessary to remember everything that's gone on. But for me, if I edit too much, I'll never get anywhere. I tear out as little as possible, after I get past the first 10k word. by 10k I've mostly got my concept down and its time to flow it all out onto paper. I can come back later and fix.
Not to say that if you already have a working process you should change. If it works don't fix it. If its not...
I wish you every success,
Remember to always follow the dream,
The Deposed King