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

Useful Knowledge
Before you embark on your writing day, or in a little window of time set aside to leave yourself materials for later, go outside and do something useful for the space you live in. Depending on where and how you live, this might be weeding the vegetable plot, or going to the laundromat, or sweeping the stairs, or vacuuming out the car, washing the windows, picking up litter on your block.
When you are done, sit down with a new file or notebook page, and title it “____ Knowledge.” (Window Washing Knowledge; Litter Pickup Knowledge, Sweeping Knowledge, etc.) Then write a paragraph or two that holds and reflects upon, in a very generalized way, what knowledge of the world you possess from this activity. By knowledge of the world, I mean your understanding of how things are, how things work. There’s no need to extrapolate from this limited corner of the world to the larger world—this might be purely a discourse on how sand settles in the edges of a stairwell and the best way to sweep it off—but if this activity does present itself as an object lesson, embrace the lesson, follow its trail to other spheres of knowledge.

Minute Lists (10)
Choose five minute lists of your own or use these: parts of a body in action (i.e. a finger curling, a liver filtering); plants with whom your body has an affinity; animals with whom your body has an affinity; words of five letters; names for new brands of socks.
*Minute Lists are a language brain warmup. Choose four or five lists, and for each, set a one-minute timer and write as many words as belong to that list as come to mind, writing at speed without pausing. Restart the timer immediately and move on to the next list. Although the list presents a rule, accept any word that your brain surfaces, even if it is a false match or a made-up word. The speed and free-for-all ethos are aimed at getting your vocabulary moving for a writing session ahead, but minute lists can also be a little like panning for gold, surfacing shiny things—names, objects, expressions—that you might want to use. I occasionally trawl my lists, circling pleasing words with a pen of a second color for easy retrieval later.
tuning excercise

Your Languages
Use an exploratory writing session to reflect on the languages you were born into and the languages into which you moved yourself.
These may be spoken languages with formal names. They may be languages which were yours to take on because of the product of historical drift, migration, war that shaped the place of your birth. They may be recognizable hybrids or dialects but they also might be moods within a language without a formal name but that you can identify by place or time or group. Think about the decades of your childhood, the sound of the adults around you. There may be many languages there.
These are also the languages that you moved yourself into, whether those are spoken languages you learned through study, travel, or emigration, or the languages of certain communities or trades where you belong enough to its conversation that the sound of your voice and the vocabulary of your thinking has enlarged.
What are the principles of order, syntax, logic in these languages? What kind of concepts or descriptions are accessible through them? What are their poetics? What is possible to think in one language that is less easily approached in others? How do they create expressive energy or achieve clarity? How do they create a code of belonging? To whom does each of your languages bring you near, bring you into relation?

human observations
Set a timer for five minutes and write into what you’ve observed or come to understand lately about how humans act or feel. This could be humans in general, humans in particular groups, or a particular human.
generator

Epigraph Heart
Grab three or four books from your shelf that have meant something to you. Scan them and pluck a sentence or two that feel vested with the resonance of the book. Don’t be too long or purposeful about it—this is a game.
Transcribe the sentences and put them together on a page. Consider the mood that arises in each possible sequence you can order them in. Think of this page as the epigraph page of a story.
Looking at this set of epigraphs, ask yourself what is at the heart of them. This might mean asking what connects them, or what shows up somehow, in each. This might mean asking yourself what appeals to you about them, what lessons they speak to, what truths.
Then conjure a situation that could hold this heart and somehow dramatize it. What does it mean to dramatize something? Think of the action of dramatizing as making a container full of gateways and pressure points that draw something hidden into the open, makes it show itself. This container is a scenario, a context, a little population; this container is a holding place for an event. This doesn’t mean that you need to something “dramatic” in the adjectival sense. But it is a different project than writing something that meditates on an idea, or memorializes it.
Write the two pages of the story that will, if fulfilled, coax whatever lurks in those epigraphs into the open—either the first two pages or the last two pages.
Later, if you want, write the rest.

two new figures
Do the tuning exercise, “caption meditations,” then take one of the scenes and populate it with two new figures. Follow their conversation. Try to tune it in; imagine you have no hand in its direction or content: hear voices. Tune into their relationship, their moods, their way of inhabiting this place you gave them. If your hearing-voice imagination stalls out, plant a question in one of their mouths to ask the other. Often if you just pose a question, something from your imagination will surface to answer it.