LOTTERY
A randomly selected pool of prompts for you. Refresh the page to get a new pool.
WARMUP

alternating attention
Write a one- or two-page real-time continuous-present description of the place you are in, braiding in the running commentary in your own mind, so that you end up with a few pages of something that faces inward and outward in alternation. When you are done, trawl the pages with a pen of a second color and circle images or words that appeal to your imagination.
minute list trawl
Do four minute-lists* of your own choosing. Go back through them with a second color pen and circle any words that please you.
* 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. Write at speed and take anything that comes to mind, even if the words popping up are incorrect matches or not real words. The speed and free-for-all ethos are aimed at getting your vocabulary moving.
tuning excercise
soft edge of present mind
Write one or two full pages that try to braid together your own running mental monologue with an account of what’s happening at this moment in the place you are in. Be soft with the edges. For fun, if you want, occasionally play with misattribution across the inside-outside barrier. For example, the refrigerator his humming but maybe I will say that it’s I who am making a little frequency symphony. Or that the refrigerator is trying to come up with examples of a what could be written on the fly. Or perhaps that the refrigerator, and not the puppy, is snoring.

Circumference Tuner
Wherever you’ve chosen to write, take a few scans around your circumference. Look at what surrounds you. Make a small map of that circumference of your writing space, noting resources, suggestions, aspirations, pleasures, and tools.
Then, after you’ve made your map, gently freewrite for five minutes or one full page, asking yourself questions about the things you’ve provided yourself with: how can you use them as you write today, whether for clarity, injunction, solance, energy, or something else? How does your space tell you something about what threads you want to follow as you write, or what discipline you want to ask of yourself?
generator
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 start). Choose an image or object—LB uses “cars,” and “other people’s mothers” as examples. Make a quick list of ten instances in your own life of that thing. Choose one of them to focus on, preferably one that sprung to mind as you made your list—LB always encourages us to go after anything that surfaces without overdetermination on our part.
Draw a big X across a whole page. Visualize yourself in the presence of your chosen object so that it’s a scene in your mind. (If you chose, for example, your best friend’s car, visualize yourself in it on a particular day in a particular place instead of all the times you were ever in that car.)
On your X-page, with a 4-minute timer going, record sensory, present-tense details of the scene. You can either write indiscriminately across the page, ignoring the X, or you can use the quadrants the X provides to locate you in space, so that you record what is ahead, to the sides, and behind you, as if you are positioned at the intersection of the two lines.
Then set a timer for 7 minutes and, on a fresh page, write a description of the scene in the present tense.

parable of a minor figure
In your mind’s eye, bring up someone from your writing that figures only minimally in what you’ve written, someone who would be “background” if this was a tv story. Identify where they are, maybe running an errand in the course of their daily life, nothing especially dramatic. Watch them fulfill that errand and then see them entertain a distraction; watch the way their attention moves. Then write a small parable of this figure, in which they give in to the object of their distraction wholly, leading to a deeply surprising chain of events.