20/08/2012
The Writing.com website does have a section of Writing Prompts. I need to take my own medicine here as I could do with getting the flow back after Winchester Conference (burnout?), Wimbledon, Olympics, grandchildren’s school holiday visits and our own season of festival and live music here in Swanage. I might try the writing prompts. I did read a tip to go to something you have already written and try to improve it and somehow the muse will come. I have ordered The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron from the library as several writers recommend it for unblocking the writer. Good luck and let me know what works for you.
Thanks Di – I will let you know! Have you tried the ‘running tap’ analogy? Write ‘blah blah blah…. etc’ until something else appears, running a rusty tap clean. I like that method, and I’m no plumber! š
The first part of writing is to know the topic and prepare a plan. You must ascertain the limits of your research work, and stick to it, otherwise if you start including too many points, you are going to create a mess literally. Provide some believable examples to pay stress on some important issues, and try to maintain the flow of information in the correct direction.
Thanks for your comments ‘Dissertation Writer’. As with a dissertation, you’re right, you need a plan. I can’t write unless I know the gist of what’s going to happen! Have a lovely Christmas x
I’m a Northamptonshire writer with an unhealthy obsession with stationery. My debut book was ‘Girl Meets Boys’, and I’m working on my second. I also write magazine articles and short stories.Ā
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Iām worried Iāve lost it. Itās only temporary, I hope, but I may have lost my writing flow.
The cause: Iāve been working abroad for 9 weeks with Raleigh International in Costa Rica. I volunteered as a Project Manager coordinating groups of 14 young people through tough challenges and demanding environmental work volunteer project. The effect: There was little time to breathe, let alone time to write. Iāve been back a week and havenāt had the inkling to write a word. I did manage to complete a full travel/expedition personal journal while I was away, so it wasnāt like I havenāt written anything in the last few months, but it was hardly my normal cup of tea and hardly creative. It was more of an outlet for my emotions and a way of recording things so I had more memories a month or year down the line to hang on to. However, added to the small pre-expedition ādryā period during which I single-handedly ran my townās first literary festival (A Write Good Festival), sorted all my medical vaccinations, packed my kit, and visited friends and family before I left, I havenāt really written anything constructive for about 12 weeks now. Iāve even hosted my first Towcester Writersā Group meeting since Iāve been back, but I didnāt have any time to write anything before we met (3 days after I landed back in the UK) so didnāt feel overly inspired or even as much of a participant as I usually felt in the eveningās activities. That was partly due to my lack of new material, but I can also hopefully blame jet lag. The group did well though, I am glad theyāve been writing in the absence of their Chair! How I plan to get my flow back Ā
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