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

Minute Lists (2)
Come up with four or five minute lists * or use the set offered here. If you’re making your own set, try to balance out specialized vocabulary (e.g. words pertaining to baking), names (real or invented), sound approaches (e.g. words starting with CH). Here are a few offerings for today to take or leave: names of childhood friends, words for types of transformation, words beginning with L, names of mountains.
* 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.

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 — a half page, perhaps. Try to hear the next word in your mind before it reaches your hands. Pay attention to how you usually experience the traffic between your mind’s voice and your moving hands. Do you see the words you are about to write? Do your hands seem to know what your mind doesn’t? However you write in your normal pattern, try to take this one at a slow, meditative speed, luxuriating in the mind’s ear and the still hand. Give each word ample receiving time, so that you’re not listening for full sentences or even phrases but just for single words. Let them be like beads strung on a wire; don’t let the grammar of the sentence operate in any kind of predictive way.
tuning excercise

mind tenants
Write a list of seven things that are occupying your mind today.

walking inventory
Take a walk. It can be around the room, your apartment, your house, your neighborhood. Find at least ten details you’ve never noticed before. Make an inventory.
generator

following paragraph (generator)
Do the tuning version of this exercise, using the writing of another author. then repeat the exercise, but with a paragraph found randomly from your own past writing. Read the paragraph. Then write a new paragraph to follow it, trying to preserve something about the original way of being in language while simultaneously injecting it with a tiny shadow of a different way.

following character generator
*The script of the exercise is below. If you lead yourself through this exercise, read each step, do it, and then read the next, and so on. This exercise relies on spending time eyes closed to summon a figure from your imagination. You can also play the audio guide for a more seamless experience. You’ll need a sheet of paper nearby.*
Close your eyes and allow a person to appear in your imagination. See them from behind.
Follow that person. They are going somewhere. Watch them as they walk.
Open your eyes and write down something descriptive about that person, just notes on who they are or what they look like. (It may be incomplete; don’t worry about wholeness.)
Close your eyes again. Watch your person go into a place, or space, that you cannot enter. Watch them come back out. They have something in their hand now. What is is? Open your eyes and write down what’s in their hand.
Close your eyes again. Follow that person. How do they walk? What is the emotional tone of the way they carry themselves through the world? Open your eyes and write down notes on that.
Close your eyes again. Follow that person as they walk. What is going through their mind? Open your eyes and write that down.
Close your eyes again. See this person as a child, around the age of 4. What delights them? Open your eyes and write that down.
Close your eyes again. See this person as a child of 8 or 9. Something happened that they will always remember. What is it? Open your eyes and write that down.
Close your eyes again. See this person on the cusp of adulthood. What motivates them as they envision their future? What forces do they perceive in the world, both those that pressure them and those they could exert. Open your eyes and write that down.
Close your eyes again. See this person as an aging person through adulthood. What are the large markers of transition in their life? Open your eyes and write several moments/events of transition down.
Close your eyes again. See this person imagining the death they would like to have. What is their vision of a good death? Map out the room they are in in your imagination. What are the objects in the room? What is the quality of the light? Where is it? Who is there? Open your eyes and write down some of those details.
Close your eyes and move back in time to some moment in this person’s life, any moment. They are talking. Give them an audience. This might be a person they are talking to, or it might be a theatrical imagination of them speaking directly to an audience. They are directing their speaking to someone who is not themselves.
Write what they say. Write for 20 minutes straight. Incorporate a story they tell about another person; also weave in words you circled from your warmup lists.