ENDLESS ROLL // SITE ARCHIVE
in descending chronological order

accretion (day 1)
Gather (in your mind’s eye or in hand) a cluster of small, unrelated things, dust and rubble from the region you want to train your

the new-room-of-the-house dream
Take up the classic dream of finding a new room or wing of the house you live in (or one that you used to live

bookshelf as image pantry
Go to your bookshelves and open one of the books you’ve been meaning to read but haven’t, one that’s been waiting for you for a

following character generator
*The script of the exercise is below. If you lead yourself through this exercise, read each step, do it, and then read the next, and

ballad
(for expanding something already in process) Visualize the world of the thing you are writing: its geographic center, its horizons. Then imagine a figure who

color & temperature
Choose a color and a temperature. Scan your memory for a moment in your life that matched that temperature and whose light or environment held

memory recall list from Lynda Barry
This is a memory recall exercise from Lynda Barry, variations of which are found in many of her books (Syllabus is a great place to

map of the area
(for building out something that is already in progress) Draw a compressed geographic map of the region of something you’ve already started writing or imagining.

echo, exchange, erasure
Find an article about something you don’t know much about. Circle or highlight twenty words. Write a conversation between two beings that incorporates at least

swerving self-interview
Do a self-interview (wherein you pose yourself questions and then fully answer them) on what you’re interested in writing about. Let each question follow up

Retrospection–Prospection
This is a timed writing for arrival into your day’s writing mind. Set a timer (duration up to you: 5 minutes, 10 minutes, 15 minutes).

empty avenue
Take yourself, in your mind’s eye, to an empty avenue. It could be a dirt road, a suburban causeway, a city street. Follow your interest

Minute Lists (2)
MINUTE LISTS are a language brain warmup. For each list item, set the timer for one minute and write as many words as you can think of in that item’s category.

Minute Lists (1)
Minute lists activate your word brain. Set a timer for one minute, and for each list assignment, write any word that comes to mind under