ENDLESS ROLL // SITE ARCHIVE
in descending chronological order
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special energy
Think about your writing’s core. Set a timer for five minutes and write about what matters to you (or has a special, appealing energy) that
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word sifter
Write a sentence at random, giving it plenty of nouns and adjectives and verbs. Then rewrite the words of that sentence into a new sentence,
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hearing a new voice
Write a description of the room you are in as you write. Root yourself in a clear first-person voice (though feel free to role-play here;
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edge of the field
Use the tuning time to ask yourself, either through a timed writing or a simple list format, what else is at the edges of your
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listening series
Listen for a word to form in your mind’s ear, then write it down and listen for the next. Before you start, set a length
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scene from details
Choose a scene or moment from your last 24 hours for a quick, highly compressed study. Start by making a sketchy, diagrammatic map of the
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Lynda Barry’s daily diary
Do Lynda Barry’s 4-minute diary. (It’s actually 7 minutes, but I like to do a speed version in 4.) Draw a box on a page,
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filter approach
Make a list of images or scenes or language ideas that you’ve imagined being part of what you’re making right now, but that haven’t yet
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passing and lurking
Make a diagrammatic diary of all the things passing through your mind today. Find a way to note which are passing and which are lurking.
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collecting and fullness
Do a collecting warmup today. Open a book and let your eyes drop at random onto the page, scooping up words in groups of three
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self-interview with digging
Do a self-interview, where you are both the interviewer and the answerer. Write it out or record yourself speaking. Focus on a few events that
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alphabet triads
Do a few ABC lists: a word beginning with a, a word beginning with b, etc. Cycle through the alphabet two or three times. Then
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nesting set
Do the “human observation” tuning exercise. Then take something articulated in your tuning and invent a new character to contradict everything you just wrote. Let
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human observations
Set a timer for five minutes and write into what you’ve observed or come to understand lately about how humans act or feel. This could
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minute lists (4)
Do four or five minute lists.* Make your own categories, or use these: words with dis-, il- or anti- as a prefix, names for next
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flaming beetle
If you did the list of 100 unrelated words last week, find it now. (If you didn’t, do the exercise: write 100 words, each of
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arrival
Instead of writing, today do you your tuning physically. Take a walk, lie down and breathe for two minutes, or just sit in your chair
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telephone solitaire
Play a game of telephone with yourself. Choose a multi-syllabic word to start from, and slide sideways until you find a lovely place to end.
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two new figures
Do the tuning exercise, “caption meditations,” then take one of the scenes and populate it with two new figures. Follow their conversation. Try to tune
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caption meditations
Set a timer for 6 minutes and cull images or scenes from your last few days. Give each one a simple descriptive identifier (i.e. letting
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as archaeologist
Wherever you are, collect fragments of language around you. These fragments might be seen, heard, remembered, or eavesdropped. If you are writing at the very
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monster soliloquy
Start with the tuning exercise, tuning your monster. Then let the monster soliloquize, if you conjured one. If you instead found a monstrous inclination to
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tuning your monster
Somewhere once, I came across the phrase “he gave birth to a monster of his imagination,” I think in reference to a philosopher. As a
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minute list pairs
Choose four or five minute-list categories* but do them all as word pairs (orange car, velvet jumper, etc.). * MINUTE LISTS are a language brain