Before beginning this workshop, spend a week with an open file or memo or notebook, making notes on Very Massive Objects that interest you — finding your whale. Look at the VMO from a standpoint of breakdown: what is it made up of, what will be put to re-use when the life of the VMO is over. Range as far away from biological VMOs as you would like— I often find that the more distance I have from the literal starting point, the easier it is to be playful in the analogy. A VMO could be non-living (a corporation, a city, a piece of land, a tenacious theory, an hit tv show, a building, a decomissioned archive, a large historical event), which also raises the question of what moment marks its end.
The first prompt will begin with the end of your VMO. There’s no need to write anything beyond notes during this pre-conjure (unless you wanted to write your VMO’s obituary for fun). And you could do all this VMO thinking without making any notes at all, just sitting with the images in your imagination. Think of the pre-conjure as preparing you to begin: scanning, sniffing, tuning into a starting place.