May 11, 2017Cracking the Writer's Block 2: Quick TipsSo you are a writer with lots of ideas, but don't know where to start. Or you have no ideas, with the same result. What do you do? Here are a few simple ideas to get you going. Read lots of stuff, especially Keep an idea file. Always carry a small notebook or a smart phone with a note-taking app so you can put things down right away. Ideas can come to mind at any time--while talking to someone, watching a movie, taking a walk. Write down anything that could be developed later--a character's name or a piece of her back story, an illustration for a point in an article, a news item or a vivid descriptive phrase. I have an idea file for potential blog posts. Each idea is just a sentence or a phrase. When I'm not sure what to do next, I go back to it and look for something that I might now be ready to develop. Take notes on anything and everything. Just to get words flowing again, pay attention to what you see, hear and smell as you travel, commute, go to the store, or work in the yard. Stop and write down every detail you can. Go to park, a mall, a busy street or a college campus to people watch. Write snatches of conversation, what people are wearing, odors you notice, architectural details, everything. Again, just write even if it's not related to the project you are working on to get you in the pattern of once more putting words down. Copy the greats. If all else fails, Like many composers, Beethoven kept a sketchbook of musical themes and ideas. In one he actually copied a portion of Mozart's 40th Symphony, which he used as inspiration in the third movement of his Fifth Symphony. If the exercise of copying is good enough for Beethoven, it should be good enough for us. Get some rest. Take a break. Do something else. Do something different than the normal if you can. Take a vacation. Or at least take a week or month away from writing or researching for your writing. If you normally sit at a desk, do something very physical or vice versa. Get in a totally different environment like the countryside if you are a city dweller or the reverse. Even if only for a weekend. Why? Because doing so gives our subconscious time to work on things while our consciousness focuses on other things. As I said here, creativity comes when we give our minds a chance to change direction. When we are so locked into one kind of task, the rest of our brain doesn't have a chance to contribute. But when we stop, new ways of thinking can emerge. These are great tips and you want more? Well, you need go no further than the next installment--Cracking the Writer's Block 3: Playing Balderdash. |
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