Grab three or four books from your shelf that have meant something to you. Scan them and pluck a sentence or two that feel vested with the resonance of the book. Don’t be too long or purposeful about it—this is a game.
Transcribe the sentences and put them together on a page. Consider the mood that arises in each possible sequence you can order them in. Think of this page as the epigraph page of a story.
Looking at this set of epigraphs, ask yourself what is at the heart of them. This might mean asking what connects them, or what shows up somehow, in each. This might mean asking yourself what appeals to you about them, what lessons they speak to, what truths.
Then conjure a situation that could hold this heart and somehow dramatize it. What does it mean to dramatize something? Think of the action of dramatizing as making a container full of gateways and pressure points that draw something hidden into the open, makes it show itself. This container is a scenario, a context, a little population; this container is a holding place for an event. This doesn’t mean that you need to something “dramatic” in the adjectival sense. But it is a different project than writing something that meditates on an idea, or memorializes it.
Write the two pages of the story that will, if fulfilled, coax whatever lurks in those epigraphs into the open—either the first two pages or the last two pages.
Later, if you want, write the rest.