LOTTERY
A randomly selected pool of prompts for you. Refresh the page to get a new pool.
WARMUP
Triplets
In a column down your page, write triplets in the form: ___ly ___ing ____s
For example, wildly oscillating notes or blankly farting genies.
Take the words that come to mind and don’t worry about sense. Try listening for the sound of the word as it approaches your imagination.
Set a timer for 2 minutes and write as many as you can. If you get stuck, push the words out through sonority alone, using “cl” or “sh” or “gr” or “w” as initial sounds. claustrophobically shallowing growls.
Word Pairs
Warmup for your language brain.
Draw lines so that you have three columns on a notebook page. At the top of each column, write down a letter pair. Use these or any other pair of your choice: H-D / B-A / R-L.
Then in each column, write a list of 15 word pairs, the first word starting with the first letter, the second with the second. heady dewdrops. hard drainpipes. etc. After you’ve done fifteen pairs for all three columns, add five more word pairs that simply reverse a subset of the pairs above, converting as needed for sense. dewy heads. draining hardships. etc.
tuning excercise
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. Find a way to note that which you have deliberately and maybe even repeatedly called to the floor.
the social yesterday
Set a timer for 5 minutes and try to record all the thoughts you had yesterday about your own experience while navigating any social, communal situation you were in yesterday.
generator
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 long time. Scan the pages until you find an object or image to borrow from it. Start from that object or image and write two short narratives using the same starting point. Let the first be a fairy tale. Let the second be a voiceover for a fictional documentary, in the voice of someone telling a story about the documentary subject when they were a reckless young person.
Beacons and Guides
Make a short list of people whose entrances into your life showed you something new you could do or become, something that changed the path you were on in some way. Choose one and do a memory recall exercise, trying to bring yourself back into the scene of an early encounter with that person. Use sensory detail and panorama to drive your recall. Try doing the recall in a scatter on or around a page, rather than written out continuously.
Read over your recall of this scene, and distill the encounter into a few gestures one person makes to another: ways or relating, showing, or inviting, perhaps. Save these gestures for use in a totally different piece of writing, or if you are in the mood to stay with memory, write the scene with a focus on these gestures: scene as a dance of gestures.