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

Chord Moods
This is a game for writing sentences. It plays with the voicing of different musical chords to find ingredients. In a chord, the root note is the tonic: it sets the basic tone, defines the sound. A major third is a happy, unobjectionable note hovering a little above the root. A fifth sits on top of that, bracing and giving ballast to the root. Together, without any other notes, the root and fifth together are known as a power chord. A minor third is a sad but unobjectionable and pretty hovertone above the root and below the fifth. A second jams the signal, together with the root, the sound is crunchy. A fourth lifts up from the root, curious and satisfying but a little bracing. A sixth is interesting. A seventh added to any of this lifts toward satisfaction but with the door always open. An eighth (octave) is all yes. There are other ways you could name the mood of all these intervals, of course.
Think of a simple statement-based sentence.
- Taking “root” as the primary image or substance of the sentence, write a sentence with a few extra clauses that plays the major triad: 1, major 3, 5. Root, happy hover, power ballast.
- Using the same root, play 1-4-5: root, brace-up lift, power ballast.
- Try the 1 minor 3 7: root, sad unobjectionable hover, bright open door.
- Try any number combination you want, and really it doesn’t have to follow a chord structure so much as take a license from the way chords stack different intervals to change the mood.
Try the same thing with a new root. Maybe with a question-based sentence, this time.
Try to make the difference a matter of word choice. Use whatever grammatical tools are needed: compound, conjoin, subordinate, etc.

minute lists (3)
Choose 4 or 5 categories for minute lists.* If you’re in the middle of a process, then let at least a few of them related to what you’ve been writing in ways that you explicitly understand. Or use these: names of car parts, words descriptive of times of day, graffiti tags real or invented, words of four syllables.
* 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

Let it Ask Questions
If you are in the middle of writing something, or even in the hazy beginnings when something of its form or stuff has surfaced in your mind, ask yourself what questions this project might ask of you, if you will let it. Take ten minutes or two full pages to write in a slow but steady freewrite. If you get stuck or find yourself at the end of the thought, as a further question based on whatever you have uncovered so far.
If you are not in the middle of writing something, perhaps do this exercise for something you have just read, imaginatively taking on the role of the author. What questions do you think this story or essay asked of its author? If those questions were put to you, not relinquishing the author role and returning to answer on your own behalf, what kind of project could you envision that would allow you to answer—or at least ponder—those questions? Take ten minutes or two pages in a slow but steady freewrite to answer first as the other author and then as yourself.

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 and notice how your body is today. Treat it as an arrival, both into your readiness to move your mind in writing, and into awareness of what and who you are today.
generator

Light on Two Sides
A generative exercise that finds action inside of environment. Audio version of the generator included.
Write a scene grounded in the description of an imagined room—its architecture, its furnishings, and the activity within it. Focus on whatever blend of these elements most draws your interest; let your imagination inhabit the room sensorily.
As you conjure this room and this building, begin by considering its place in the world, its decade in time. Include doors but omit the room’s windows at first—let this room be artificially or magically lit. Conjure the details of the room’s surfaces and objects. Its entrances and exits. Its shelves, furniture, places of wear and places of neglect.
Now give your room a natural light source on one side only, and in your mind’s eye, populate the room, as if sending in actors to take their places. See it as a still image in heavy contrast, saturated by glare.
Now watch the image as you open up another source of light from a different wall, so that the room, in your imagination, is now pervaded by natural light from two sides. Feel the influx of light and its effect on the bodies in the room. Note the expansion of the space as it includes what is outside the windows as well as the interior of the room.
Write a short description of the room as a container or holding place for the living beings within it. Focus on the room and the feeling of the room, whether directly or via its inhabitants’ perceptions.
Find the ending of your description by articulating what that environment makes possible for human action or thought. Let that final possibility become the generative seed of something new.

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 on something specific in the prior answer, clarifying or challenging it. Part-way through the self-interview, allow your Questioner and Answerer selves to slide into two fictional (or nonfictional, borrowed) people’s voices.
Then write a new stream-of-consciousness passage in one of those person’s mind. Perhaps follow them as they leave the interview, or as they wait in line at the grocery store.