ENDLESS ROLL // SITE ARCHIVE

in descending chronological order

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

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,

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;

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

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

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

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,

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

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.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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. 

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

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

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

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

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

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