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

Image Surround
List the things surrounding your writing space, naming them not as objects or inventory, but as images. Define “image” here as a thing in a context, a thing with potential energy or relation to a past. It will help to use a longer phrase: “scissors angling at a stack of books” or “scissors glowing with reflected dawn light” rather than “scissors.” Enjoy the verbs that place objects into context and point toward animation. Let this be a warmup for your language and your image brain at the same time.

OEDelighter
If you have access to the Oxford English Dictionary, whether in giant print or online database (check with your library), choose a word to look up. Spend time reading aloud every one of its senses and earliest instances in print. Then write ten sentences delighting in that word’s older and weirder senses or spellings. Let your word sit in the sentence the way a gem sits in a ring.
(The OED is going to have much more volume of early instances than anywhere else, but if you don’t have OED access, use an etymological dictionary or read the etymology of a word on Merriam-Webster’s site or similar.)
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.

self-interview with digging
Do a self-interview, where you are both the interviewer and the answerer. Write it out or record yourself speaking. Focus on a few events that have shown up in your writing so far, if you’re in the middle of something, or that you’ve imagined incorporating even if you haven’t yet. Ask yourself to dig in your memory or imagination in order to surface more details and proliferate approaches to understanding the event. (See the Matthew Goulish daily teacher on approaches.) Let each question be simple and open. “Tell me more about…”
generator

ceremony of transition
In her essay “The History of Scaffolding,” Lisa Robertson writes:
We believe that the object of architecture is to give happiness. For us this would mean the return of entropy and dissolution to the ephemeral. The architecture of happiness would rehearse a desanctification of time, which is itself only a scaffolding. We live on in this temporary framework of platforms and poles, as diagrammed in the most rudimentary fashion by the letter “t.” All the ceremonies of transition take place on such makeshift plankings: judgements, executions, banquets and symposia, entertainments and recitals, markets and bazaars, funerals, births and weddings and illicit fuckings are rehearsed and performed to their witnesses on this transient stage, which is sometimes decorated with drapes or swags or flags or garland, sometimes padded for the comfort of the performing body, sometimes left bare as if to state the plain facts of life. The scaffold is a pause, an inflection of passage. It accommodates us in a shivering.
Erect a scaffold platform of some kind and write the “ceremony of transition” that takes place on it. If you want, write that ceremony as an account given by a witness of it. If you want, give it the cadence and mood of a bedtime story, or perhaps a tacit warning to the listener. Or maybe make the speaker a terrible liar.

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.