LOTTERY
A randomly selected pool of prompts for you. Refresh the page to get a new pool.
WARMUP
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, taking up most of the page. Then draw a line vertically down the middle, and another toward the bottom to make two long columns and two square boxes. In the first long column write DID. In the second, SAW. The left box, OVERHEARD. Then setting the timer, write down 7 things you did in the last 24 hours in the DID column, 7 things you saw in the last 24 hours in the SAW column, one thing you overhead in the last 24 hours in the OVERHEAD box, and in the remaining box, quickly draw something from the SAW column.
For a visual on the box, see the page below from her wonderful, wonderful Syllabus (Drawn & Quarterly, 2014)
map without names
Make a diagrammatic map of the room you are in, using descriptive phrases instead of accepted names, as if you don’t know the names for things but are trying to make yourself clear, so that the hi hat becomes the double metal dome clapper and so on.
tuning excercise
Ordinary Intensities
An audio version of this tuning exercises is playable at the bottom of the page.
Think about something from your ordinary life, something you don’t necessarily associate with the impulse to write, but with your daily routine. Think back through it, if you already did it today, or perhaps take some time now to do either something you have to do—a pee break, a tidy-up of the room, a message you’re obligated to send, food you need to prepare—or something you like to do that you do every day—a coffee break, sitting in a particular chair, whatever. As you do this ordinary thing, take it as more than what it is by itself: take it on as an occasion, an incitement, to writing. Seek out the thing that is intense in it, that is, something strong enough to move you to feeling, thinking or feelingthinking, and toward the impulse to record. Write a short piece (try either exactly 50 or exactly 100 words) that is occasioned by that ordinary intensity.
Read what you wrote aloud. Write a note-to-self, about the texture and interest of attention in the piece you just wrote. See if you can carry that texture and interest into your other writing or making for the day. Think of this attention as a kind of digging tool or dousing rod or radar: an instrument that allows you to home in on intensity within a scene.
For Stuck Places
Deborah Hay, a lifer of the experimental dance world, uses questions and mantras worked over long periods of time as a steady underscore to each season of her dance practice. She might play one question in mind for a year, and have collaborators tune themselves to that question too, so that it becomes an active sub-strata in a dance, an instrument for opening up ways of moving or becoming aware of possible choices.
This was one of her questions when I took a workshop with her one year, and I have played the question ever since as it recurs to mind: What if where I am is what I need?
Use this question any time, but especially for stuck places. Use it to pivot the angle of your vision on your own inhibition, blockage, stoppage, dullness, confusion, or boredom. The question fruits when you ask, what do I need here? To find that answer, you have to ask, what’s actually here? Can you derive any kind of freedom or nutrition or provision or ongoingness from this place you’re in?
generator
Excursion Scanner
Scan your memories of your own excursions far from home. Keep the scan active as you make a list of 20 things, a mix of objects, visual elements, sonic elements, technologies, and populated locations. Keep moving your mind through places you’ve been to, scanning the remembered scenes for image, object, sound, technology, location ripeness.
Then turn the page over and write compact overviews of each scene in a new four-scene story. Weave and pluck and freely combine from your list of 20. Let all the substance of this outline be built of recombinations derived from this inventory you’ve made.
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.