I don’t know a writer who doesn’t experience times when the ideas flow freely, and times when the creative juices dry up. We all need a kitbag full of strategies to prime the pump.
From writing groups, workshops, and other sources, I’ve come across a few good quick writing exercises here and there. I like to use them when I’m feeling stale and uncreative, when I need to solve a problem with a manuscript, or sometimes just for fun. Here are a few of my favourites:
1. Free writing. I think every writer does this once in a while, for good reason. It’s a great way to unblock and release your muse. Simply take a picture or a word as a starting point, set a time limit – one minute, five minutes – and WRITE. That’s the only rule. You cannot stop writing, even if you write the same word ten times. It’s as simplistic as it sounds, but you just might amaze yourself with what you produce.
2. Write a scene using DIALOGUE ONLY. No body language, no description, no narrative. I had a lot of fun with this one writing a dialogue between two partially deaf people who kept misunderstanding each other. It really gets you thinking about how to show instead of telling.
3. Think of a character as different from yourself as you can imagine, and write a scene showing that person getting up in the morning and starting their day.
4. Take a very familiar scene, like your bedroom or backyard, and write about a blind person in that setting. I’ve mentioned this one before, and it’s a great way to get away from dependence on visuals and learn to include all the senses in description.
5. Take a scene you’ve already written, with two characters, and write it in the other character’s point of view. I did this with several scenes in McShannon’s Chance. It helped me figure out if I really had written those scenes in the POV of the character with the most to lose.
6. Tell a story in ten words or less, newspaper headline style. The best one of these I’ve ever seen: ‘Spinster aunt sold wedding dress today.’
Hope you enjoy this, and may your muse be kind! Feel free to add to this list if you have ideas.
7 Comments
Sarah Butland
September 21, 2010 at 6:34 pmJennie Marsland
September 21, 2010 at 6:57 pmJulia Smith
September 22, 2010 at 3:37 pmJennie Marsland
September 22, 2010 at 4:07 pmAnn Stewart
September 22, 2010 at 9:14 pmKelly Boyce
September 24, 2010 at 1:28 pmJennie Marsland
September 24, 2010 at 1:38 pm