Jul
22
2009

Often people think of creative writing as poems and stories, but all writing is creative. Whether it is a story, journal entry, essay, resume or something else creative writing is a valuable resource. It can expand your perspective, help you plan projects, and facilitate concept development. It can help you find new ways to communicate, help you get in touch with deep emotions, and transform your outlook on the world. Creative writing has taken many roles in my life; from being therapeutic, to increasing my vocabulary and also putting my brain to work finding new ways to look at life. I hope the ideas presented here will be useful and fun for you!
Jun
08
2010
I discovered a real gem of a creative writing exercise, inspired by Austin Kleon’s newspaper blackout poems. He takes a newspaper and blacks out words with a marker that he doesn’t want, leaving a poem with the remaining words. Now my aim wasn’t really to write poems, I just wanted to get the creative juices flowing.
What I did was pick up a magazine and chose a random article (you can use whatever type of text you like). I would scan the article randomly stringing words together. I didn’t worry about it making sense, or being proper grammar. You don’t want to really think about it, but the words should relate somewhat in the style of a haiku or other type of poem. Again don’t really think about it too much because you will edit and refine it later. You want to go very quickly, and just take stuff off the top of your head. You need to do this to keep your left brain quiet. I did use one rule, and that was that the words had to go in order that they were in the original text. This made sure I would go quickly and kept me from jumping back and forth, which would cause me to think too consciously about what I was doing. I would make about two or three short sentences or phrases. I use the term sentences very loosely. When I was finished, I had a sort of poem, that could be used as is, as a writing prompt, or a subject for my art journal.
The amazing thing was that while I was not consciously trying to make sense, my subconscious was actually creating, and my results actually had several layers of meaning. I then would tweak them just a little and add or remove words, or just edit them briefly to make a little more sense. The main idea was already there. I’ll give you an example:
Somehow years of working had frozen them. Forgetting the meaning. Worn and faded they keep to themselves, while they lose the memories they never make.
This is about forgetting how to live. Forgetting to create, forgetting to pass things on. Losing memories of things you never took the time to experience. Forgetting what is most important and getting lost inside yourself. Also “all work and no play…” From start to finish, this one took me maybe two minutes. When I looked it over I was really surprised that it was this filled with meaning. It was a lot of fun. Try it out and see what you think. You might also want to check out Austin Kleon’s blog at austinkleon.com. Happy Writing!
Dec
29
2009
Here are some writing prompts that you can use for journaling, writing an essay, or to spark a story. Currently I am celebrating winter holidays in the U.S.; But I realize everyone does not celebrate the same holidays, so choose what is relevant for you.
1. Choose one specific holiday moment, event or tradition to write about.
2. What is your favorite holiday/ Why?
3. What is the best gift that you’ve ever received/given?
4. Write about a favorite ornament.
5. What is your least favorite holiday? Why?
6. Invent a new holiday. Describe what it celebrates and how it is celebrated in as much detail as possible.
Happy Writing!
Sep
18
2009
You have an essay to write, or an idea for your story, or a character you want to develop; but you can’t seem to get started. Here are some methods I’ve used for myself and my kids that help. Some of these ideas also work for other kinds of creative block or getting projects started.
1. Free Writing: Just get started. Sometimes the problem is actually that we’re editing ourselves, before we even have anything down on paper. We want it perfect the first time, or maybe we just need to get rid of the critic in our heads. It doesn’t matter if you start out writing, “I don’t know what to write”, or “this is stupid”, or if you have some fragments of your subject or idea. Do this for at least 5-10 minutes, no censoring, no analyzing, no editing. Often this is enough to clear your head, get your brain in gear and shut that inner critic up. If you already have ideas for your paper/story, and you’re just not sure how to execute it, just start writing what’s in your head, and worry about what order it goes in, and making sense of it later. Since we don’t use stone to write on anymore, you can always change it!
2. Mind Mapping: Write your topic or idea in the center of the page and circle it. Draw lines radiating from that word and write other related ideas as they pop into your head, branching from those and adding others. Work quickly. You should be chaining ideas together as you work, using new branches for separate ideas. In other words: suppose our center word was apple; you might have a branch(or row) of lines connecting all the words about how apples look, then a separate branch for all the words about how they taste, etc.
3. Take a Walk: Get up and take a walk and do something totally unrelated to your writing for a while (don’t get lost) then try again.
4. Consult Others: Talk to others or read what others have written on the subject. Sometimes others’ ideas will spark something for you. Sometimes it just helps to bounce ideas off of someone else. Often while asking for help, the solution comes to me.
I hope these are helpful. Happy Creating!
Aug
18
2009
Here are a few more ideas for your journal writing:
One Liners: Sum up your day, or how you feel using only one sentence.
Brain Drain: This is also known as stream of consciousness writing. Set a timer for 30 minutes and write whatever comes into your head. Don’t censor yourself or worry about it making sense. Keep writing until the timer runs out. I really mean whatever pops into your head. It’s okay if you start out with “I don’t know what to write,” or “this is goofy”
The idea is to just get it all out. It is useful for clearing your head, or as a warm up before more purposeful writing.
Write Your Day Backwards: Recount your day starting with the last thing you did before you sat down to write, working backwards to the beginning of your day; and have dessert before dinner if you like!