An hour won’t . . . Prompt #459

  • An hour won’t . . . Prompt #459

    Writing Prompt: An hour won’t make a difference.

    When using prompts to inspire writing, you can also use the opposite of what the prompt suggests:

    An hour will make a difference.

    Just Write!

  • Start Small

    Today’s brilliant post is by Nancy Julien Kopp:

    I’m a proponent of starting with small projects and moving on, step by step, to the bigger ones. Many writers dream of publishing a novel or a full book memoir. Some will start out their writing journey by beginning the pursuit of that dream immediately. It’s fine to have a worthy goal, but diving in the deep end before you know how to swim can bring big problems.

    Start small. Write a personal essay or memoir about an occurrence, something that happened and had some meaning for you. Later, it might become a part of the book you hope to write. Those little snippets of memoir can grow into something much larger, as can your personal experiences that taught you a lesson, as we see in personal essays.

    Novelists can practice their skill by writing short stories before attempting a full novel. Lots of short stories. Use all the tools you have as a writer to write a good short story, then submit it. If you have some success in selling your short stories, it could very well be time to begin writing the novel you’ve been thinking about for a very long time.

    Many writers want to start with the big project, to write a memoir or a novel before writing anything else. They have read many books. How hard can it be? Some will begin by reading a book or two on writing novels (or memoirs), and that’s fine. Others will not bother with reading a book about how to write a novel. They’ll start with chapter one, page one. A few might do very well with this method, but most are going to run into one roadblock after another. At some point, the whole thing could become overwhelming. 

    If that happens, step back and work on smaller projects for a while. Read some of those reference books on writing a memoir or novel. Attend a workshop about the same. Talk to other writers. Gather all the information you can before you tackle that big idea.

    One of my keywords is patience. Don’t be in such a hurry to tackle the big game plan. Take your time, learn as you go, but continue to keep the original goal in mind. Start on the big scheme when you feel ready. With some success at smaller projects, you’ll have some confidence in your ability to take on the big one. 

    Nancy Julian Kopp has been published in 22 Chicken Soup for the Soul books, several anthologies including The Write Spot: Possibilities, newspapers, magazines and ezines. Her writing includes award-winning fiction for children, creative nonfiction, poetry, travel and personal essays.  She was named Prose Writer of the Year in 2013 by the Kansas Authors Club.

  • A Perfect Moment . . . Prompt #458

    Write about a perfect moment.

    You can write this as a scene in a play, a TV show, or a movie with scenery details. Include characters in this scene and include location (a specific room, a certain place).

    You can include details about the weather, time of day or evening or night, time of year, the mood of each person or the emotional feeling of the people in this scene.

    Or:  Just write about a perfect moment.

    You can write fantasy or fiction. Or you can write about what really happened.

    A perfect moment. Just write!

    Photo by Laura Plunk Davis
  • Contemplation. Prompt #457

    What isn’t working in your life?

    What is working?

    What are you resisting?

    What needs to change?

    What really matters?

    What do you want?

    Ready? Set. Go! Just write!

  • Creativity as magic

    Michael Shapiro’s latest book is a winner.

    Below is an excerpt from the introduction of The Creative Spark: How musicians, writers, explorers, and other artists found their inner fire and followed their dreams.

    It reminds me of an important message for every one: We are all unique and have our stories to tell. No one else can tell your story. Only you can.

    From The Creative Spark by Michael Shapiro

    Something magical happened as I completed this book. One evening just before sunset I was in our backyard watering the planter boxes. On a stem of parsley I noticed a startling pattern of color, concentric rings of orange and black dots. Looking closer I saw the segments of a swallowtail caterpillar and could identify its tiny feet. For the next few days the caterpillar chomped on the parsley plant, absorbing energy for the next stage of its life. I placed a stick in the pot, at an angle to give the caterpillar a place to hang its chrysalis.

    The caterpillar’s appearance felt like a message from the universe. For many months I’d been working on transforming interviews I’d conducted with some of the world’s most creative people into a coherent set of chapters. I’d distilled the essence of these interviews into a tonic of ideas about the creative process. And I’d written biographical introductions that sought to put each person’s life in perspective and offer insights about the sources of his or her art.

    As I write this, on 2019’s summer solstice, our adopted caterpillar (my wife has given it the gender-neutral name Jordan) is undergoing a miraculous transformation into a butterfly. During the past week, we’ve watched the caterpillar turn into a chrysalis that matches the color of the branch from which it hangs, its striated brown camouflage the antithesis of the colorful creature it was just a few days ago. Yet it’s what is happening inside the chrysalis that is truly astonishing.

    The caterpillar is dissolving, using enzymes to digest itself. It’s being broken down into nonspecific cells that can be used for any part of the butterfly. Yet some “highly organized groups of cells known as imaginal discs survive the digestive process,” according to Scientific American. Each of these constellations of cells is programmed to build a specific part of the butterfly. There are imaginal discs for wings, for eyes, for legs, for every part of the butterfly. Typically, after about two weeks, a yellow-and-black swallowtail butterfly will crack open the chrysalis, dry its wings in the morning sun, and fly off seeking nectar.

    Why bring up a caterpillar in a book about creativity? First, because it offers such a rich metaphor, and the name “imaginal discs” suggests that making art depends on imagination. And to prepare for its transformation, the caterpillar needs to first feed itself, just as a musician or author must absorb the thoughts and influences that come from songs, books, conversations, memories, and observations. Many creative people seek to isolate themselves, cocoon-like, to escape the relentless drumbeat of popular culture so they can hear their own voices.

    “What I noticed at an early stage was that the writers I admire are living a long way from the world,” the author Pico Iyer told me. “The great originals are originals because they’re living outside the received conversation, outside secondhand words and secondhand ideas, to some extent living in a space of their own where they’re able to hear their deeper self and come up with things completely outside the norm. I think that’s why they really shake us.”

    Isn’t that what we crave in this era of information overload: songs or stories that really shake us and offer new ways of seeing the world, of hearing ourselves, of feeling, on a soul level, our deepest truths? That’s why I’ve chosen the 31 creative people in this book. They’re original, pioneering, dynamic, and insatiably curious. The authors, musicians, and others profiled in these pages could coast on their earlier accomplishments, but every one has continued to seek adventurous new avenues for igniting their creative spark.

    Of course, seeking solitude to hear one’s inner voice doesn’t mean we should shut out those who came before us. As Iowa folk singer Greg Brown says, “I feel links back to a time that not much is known about. Songs, poetry, whatever you want to call it, that urge, it just goes way, way, way back there. And that’s a good connection to feel to life. It’s hard for me to imagine life without that.”

    Back to me (Marlene) 

    I hope you can spend 15 minutes a day (or longer, if you can) and write your story, as only you can.

    Meet Michael at the launch of The Creative Spark.
    Nov 9 at 4 pm. Book Passage in Corte Madera. 

  • Yesterday. Prompt #456

    Sometimes writing prompts are complex:

    Physical location and action to describe emotional state – Prompt #12

    And: Location, or place as a character – Prompt #8

    And: Imagine you are invited. . . Prompt #64

    Sometimes writing prompts are simple, like today’s writing prompt: Yesterday . . .

    Don’t over think. Just write!

    Prompt: Yesterday . . .

  • Perfection vs Good Enough

    Guest Blogger, David Moldawer, is the author of The Maven Game. He writes weekly essays for writers.

    Perfection vs Good Enough

    Take the old quote:   Perfect is the enemy of good.

    Voltaire might have been the one to say it in this form, but the idea of “good enough beats unattainable ideal” has been around much longer. In fact, it warrants its own Wikipedia entry, if you’re curious to trace its history.

    However it’s expressed, it’s good advice for a writer. But is it perfect? (See what I did there?) I’ve often said, “remember, perfect is the enemy of good,” to people stuck in the trap of perfectionism, but over time I’ve come to question the effectiveness of simply saying the words.

    If you’re working on a solo project with no genuine deadline, more can be done to improve it. And even more. There is always a better solution to even the smallest creative problem in any work, whether or not you can find it in a reasonable amount of time. That simple fact can be paralyzing. In fact, I’d argue that while writers might not actually get “blocked”—nothing is truly in the way of getting words down—they can definitely be paralyzed by perfectionism.

    While I’m skeptical of the value of the adage—it’s never gotten me out of any ruts—I do find demonstrations of the good-enough philosophy motivating. They get me going when nothing else can. Seeing good-enough in action, it becomes just a little bit easier to inject a little pragmatism into your own work.

    I’ve written before about my love of the competitive forging reality show Forged in Fire and this is a part of it. When a smith accidentally snaps his blade in half with thirty minutes left on the clock, it’s inspiring to see a feat that took over two hours the first time somehow repeat itself in a quarter of the time with comparable results. A few minutes of an episode of Forged in Fire is often the kick in the pants I need to push through and finish instead of finesse.

    Another place I turn to for good-enough inspiration is the YouTube series Pitch Meeting. In it, writer/actor/comedian Ryan George portrays both a sociopathic studio executive and the manically productive screenwriter tasked with pitching him on his latest project. (He’s the writer behind all the big movies.) As the screenwriter explains what happens in the film, the exec can’t help but point out all the things that don’t make any sense, or that might annoy viewers, or that might be downright offensive. “Whoopsie!” the screenwriter cheerfully replies. “Whoopsie!” The exec repeats. And on they go to the next plot point. After all, they’ve got a movie to make.

    For over two years, George-the-screenwriter has pitched George-the-exec on dozens, if not hundreds, of movies.

    The beauty of the Pitch Meeting concept is that it forces you, the viewer, to grapple with the fact that a real writer and a real exec—at minimum—had to force their way through all the inconsistencies and logical fallacies inherent in a screenplay in order to get it made. It goes without saying that they solved many more than they ignored, but at a certain point, the originators had to say “whoopsie!” and leave it at that.

    Click here to read the rest of David’s “Whoopsie” essay.

  • Imagine receiving a greeting card. Prompt #455

    The last Just Write post talked about writing a messy first draft.

    Ready to start that messy project?

    Or continue with something you are working on.

    Here is a writing prompts to start the messy project:

    Writing Prompt: Imagine you (or your fictional character) received a greeting card in the mail. It can be from someone you know or a character you create.

    It can be from a celebrity.

    It can be sent to the wrong address.

    What does the card say?

    How does the narrator react when reading the card?

    What happens next?

    Just Write!

  • When the final product satisfies.

    Elizabeth Sims

    Whether you write fiction, non-fiction, poetry, songs, or whatever you write, this might help understand why the final product isn’t working.

    Excerpted from “Rough it Up,” by Elizabeth Sims, Writer’s Digest Magazine, February 2009,

    Get messy with your first draft to get to the good stuff. 

    As Ernest Hemingway famously said, “The first draft of anything is sh*t.”

    For years, I didn’t understand. When I started writing fiction seriously, I kept trying to get it right the first time. Over time, as I got rougher with my first drafts, my finished work got better and better.

    Why does a coherent first draft give birth to a stilted finished product?

    Because it means you haven’t let it flow.

    You haven’t given yourself permission to make mistakes because you haven’t forgiven yourself for past ones.

    Admit it: Unless your throttle’s wide open, you’re not giving it everything you’ve got.

    Creativity in writing isn’t a linear process, even though we read in a linear fashion and the words must go on the page one after the other; even though we must put our thoughts and words in order so the reader can make sense of them.

    Writing, in fact, is the only art that is literally one-dimensional.

    If you can be gut-level honest with yourself, you’ve really got a shot at your readers.

     And the only way to find that honesty is to not overthink it. 

    Consider your pen your paintbrush.

    For your writing to come alive — to be multi-dimensional — you must barter away some control.

    The rewards are worth it.

    Prompts to inspire writing.

  • Angry? Too nice? Prompt #454

    Congratulations on being here, taking time to do something for yourself.

    Sometimes the writing prompts on The Write Spot Blog are serious, sometimes fun, and sometimes instrumental in learning something about writing and learning about ourselves.

    You are always free to write whatever you want. The prompts are just ideas to get you started.

    If you are writing and run out of things to say, either repeat the prompt, or write “what I really want to say.” And go from there.

    When you read the prompt, write it down, and just start writing. Get rid of the editor that sits on your shoulder. Don’t think. Don’t overthink. Write whatever comes into your mind.

    The writing prompts are meant to encourage you to write what you really want to write (no judgement on good or bad, nice or not nice content).

    But what if what you really want to write isn’t very nice?

    I say . . . go for it. You can burn your writing or delete whenever you want. No one ever needs to see it. You are writing this for yourself. Not to entertain others.

    Is it okay to write about anger and being angry?

    This is from my friend Lizzie, who is a hypnotherapist:

    Anger is good because it’s energy IN MOTION.

    Depression is stuck energy and we rarely take action. We become bound to “this is how it is.” 

    Back to me: The opposite of being allowed our anger feelings . . . we’re taught to be nice.

    So, yeah, write about your feelings . . . anger, being too nice, or the fine balance of “just right.”

    From The Writing Diet by Julia Cameron:

    “I got a lot of mileage out of being nice,” says Benjamin, a composer. “Whenever I felt angry, I ate to stuff my feelings. I never expressed how I really felt. Instead, I used comfort foods to console myself. When I began using a journal, I found I could calmly and maturely express my anger. I may not be quite as ‘nice’ anymore, but I am a hell of a lot thinner.”

    Back to me: Anger is a spark that can be used as creative fuel. We can take our anger to the page and write our emotions. We write to tell ourselves the truth, and the truth may be that we are angry.

    Prompt: Write about being angry. Write about being nice. Write whatever comes into your head. Just Write!