For the next several days, you will alternate between things that are additive and things that concentrate or condense. Even if you have a strong sense of where you are going, the additive prompts can provide just a little extra breadth or an oblique angle of approach to energize your imagination of a known scene. But feel free to embrace them on whatever scale makes sense, from influencing a sentence to giving you a guiding task for the day.
Let your writing pass through a debris field. Let it pick up some debris. Let it lose some of itself too, in the passage, leaving craters or holes. If you don’t know where to look for debris, you could go out and collect it by observing and eavesdropping in a busy place, or you could try a procedure, like taking the first quotation in every news article on a randomly chosen newspaper spread. You could also poach from your old notebooks, or perhaps if your house is a mess, take an inventory of everything out of place or control, physical and psychical, and let that come at you as a kind of asteroid field. Consider that the transmutation of debris into an element of your writing is a kind of alchemical, loving act, or at least it could be.