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

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.

Stuffed Paragraph
Write a paragraph stuffed with words with consonant pairs (“pl” “ch” “st” “tr” and so on). If you don’t know where to start, try writing it as an loudspeaker announcement in a grocery store or transit hub.
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.

Sticky Things
Freewrite for a few minutes or half a page, trying to recall some of the sticky things that have been circling your mind recently. Things you come back to. Anxieties but also hopes. You can use the fill-in-the-blanks formula “I’ve been thinking about _____” to keep the freewrite moving.
Turn this list of sticky things into fodder for big questions you can ask a character or figure in your writing. Then spend ten minutes writing a dialogue between you and your character that begins with this question and follows from there. Let your character approach the question, the sticky thing, in their own way. Use the dialogue as a tool for clarifying your own relationship to the sticky thing by juxtaposing it with a totally different relationship.
When you’re done, ask yourself if anything that’s come up might add movement or energy to your writing. If so, make a note of what it is.
generator

filter approach
Make a list of images or scenes or language ideas that you’ve imagined being part of what you’re making right now, but that haven’t yet shown up in actual writing. Choose one that is most compelling to you and enter into it—but enter with a filter: use attention to light and sound; use childhood feeling; use attention to infrastructure and politics; use attention to assonance or consonance, use swing time… or something else. Cut a deliberate path into this place in your mind waiting to be written. Perhaps this will generate material that goes straight into your writing; perhaps it will be an occasion for something new to arise—a new event or figure, a new favorite word, a new way of thinking about your approach.

Walking as Occasion
Go to your bookshelves (or wherever else your old reading is gathered), and collect a series of fragments that contemplate an abstraction. (For example the idea of the soul, the self, the nature of time, the color green, the presence of the past, the experience of hunger, the idea of renewal.)
Conjure a figure in mind. See the figure taking a walk through a site that is somehow well paired with the contemplation, whether through historical association or accessible quietude or any other line of connection. The site needn’t be an obviously contemplative place. You could write a walk for a subway platform that contemplates commute or migration. The same walk, deployed on a walk next to a river, might cast an entirely different tone on the contemplation. What about the same walk up and down the aisles of your local Target?
Write a short piece that counterbalances the geography and specificity of the site and the steady non-narrative progress of walking with the gathered contemplative fragments. Think of the walk as the jewel setting and the fragments the jewels. Or you might send the sparkle in reverse, make the description of the grocery aisle the real diamond.
The target of the writing is to think through the contemplative fragments, but the walk through the site is used as the necessary narrative occasion for setting the contemplation in motion.
You may choose to signal the quotation or not. This could be an exercise in incorporation, in which case you can offer citation afterwards, if you wish.
*This was adapted from a prompt for an audio walk. See the original prompt here.