Monday, January 23, 2017

The Curious Creative: Week 16

Memories in Clothing 

This is the sixteenth installment of The Curious Creative, weekly 10-minute writing exercises for busy individuals interested in exploring their creativity. For the complete rationale, click here

My Thoughts:

You don’t have to go very far to seek inspiration. For example, your closet of clothing is packed with possibilities. In this week’s exercise, you will use the emotions and memories attached to a piece of clothing as your starting point. Clothes evoke attachment, and are the bearers of sweet and painful memories. Like music, they are a powerful jumping off point for writing. This exercise is adapted from Michael Smith and Suzanne Greenberg’s writing exercise, “Quilting” (p. 63-66).

Your Turn!

  1. Go through your closet and locate pieces of clothing that were significant to you at a certain points in your life. To get the pen moving, make a simple list that includes the clothing and the event/day when you wore it. Also jot down a few words about the feelings of that day. 
  1. Choose one of the items from your list. Scan your memory to make a second list or freewrite containing the details you remember about that day. Describe the event, the weather. Who was there and who was not there? How did you physically feel in the clothing, and how were you emotionally feeling? How did you acquire that piece of clothing and why did you choose to wear it that day? What was significant about that day? What led up to it and what happened after?
  1. Now circle the “moments of heat” (lines in your freewrite/list that are emotionally packed). Use one of these moments as your starting off point for a poem, story or essay. If you’re ever feeling stuck when you think about how to begin an actual piece of writing, don’t stare at the white page. Simply add another layer of brainstorming to your process. For example, try simply writing the story of that day by beginning with the moment of heat. 
How did you do? Did the multiple brainstorming steps lead you to discover an interesting or poignant truth about that day? Were you able to incorporate details about the clothing which added depth to your piece, grounding the emotions in concrete details?

To encourage each other and grow a community of Curious Creatives, sign in from a google account so you can share your creation in the comment boxes below. Also, if you subscribe to this blog (submit your email address in the "Follow this Site by Email" box to the right), you will get an email update whenever a new exercise is added. Thanks for playing! 


Work Cited

Smith, Michael C. and Greenberg, Suzanne. “Quilting.” Everyday Creative Writing:
Panning for Gold in the Kitchen Sink, 2nd ed., p. 63-66.




Sunday, January 15, 2017

The Curious Creative: Week 15

Old Photographs
Chadlington Village website 2017 www.chadlington.com
This is the fifteenth installment of The Curious Creative, weekly 10-minute writing exercises for busy individuals interested in exploring their creativity. For the complete rationale, click here

My Thoughts:

Sometimes being creative feels like a matter of finding inspiration. Sometimes finding inspiration means taking yourself out of your usual pattern in order to witness something different than what you see everyday. This week, you’ll find inspiration by entering the different world of an old photograph.

Your Turn!

  1. Take yourself on a date to a place that has old photographs. A museum will do, but even better is a coffee shop that has old books lying around, or an older relative’s home where you can peruse old photo albums.
  1. Make yourself comfortable and look through the photos until you come across one that gives you pause. 
  1. Freewrite for 10 minutes about its story. What was happening the day this photo was taken? Who and what were not included in the frame; what was standing outside the shot and why? Your freewrite can take the form of sentences as prose, or you can brainstorm and list words and phrases like a poem. The goal is to keep your hand moving. Whatever comes out of your pen is just creating space for even better ideas to come. Feel free to speculate and imagine to construct a reality that may or may not be true. 
How did you do? Did you enter a different world while freewriting, the world of the photo? Did your mind loosen up to imagine and create details of the moment the photo was taken? How did you feel after the exercise- engaged, alert, peaceful? These feelings are the telltale signs of what some might call “inspiration” and others call “being in the flow.”

To encourage each other and grow a community of Curious Creatives, sign in from a google account so you can share your creation in the comment boxes below. Also, if you subscribe to this blog (submit your email address in the "Follow this Site by Email" box to the right), you will get an email update whenever a new exercise is added. Thanks for playing! 

Sunday, January 8, 2017

The Curious Creative: Week 14

Metaphor Bank

This is the fourteenth installment of The Curious Creative, weekly 10-minute writing exercises for busy individuals interested in exploring their creativity. For the complete rationale, click here

My Thoughts:

There’s something inherently fun about collecting beautiful things. For this week’s exercise, it’s not artwork or seashells or new shoes you will be pocketing; it’s metaphors. One of the steps to becoming a good writer is reading a lot, While reading, you are constantly exposing yourself to the craft. Consciously and subconsciously, your mind is picking up craft elements. Therefore, to get better at writing great metaphors, we must first read beautiful metaphors.

Your Turn!

1.     This week’s activity is going to be a ubiquitous task hanging around you all week. That is, you can’t simply sit down for 10 minutes and hunt for metaphors. Instead, I want you to pay attention all week to what you read and hear and be specifically aware of metaphors. Underline one in the book you are reading for pleasure. Circle one in the newspaper article you read in the morning. Jot one down from the radio, TV show, or podcast you listen to. Watch a movie, and listen for a metaphor. Try to collect at least three striking metaphors.

2.  In your notebook, write out the cool metaphors in longhand.

For example, here are two that I found this week in the book I am reading for my book club book, News of the World by Paulette Jiles:
·      “She had been laced into a thing that she could only imagine was for magical purposes, meant to confine her heart and her breath in a sort of cage to hold her forever like a shut fist that would never open.” (a 10-year-old Native American girl referring to the corset she had been put into by white people.)
·      “There was a half-moon waxing and it seemed to run in reverse between cascading clouds that flowed together and then pulled apart and then ran together again.”

3. Keep this Metaphor Bank page running in your notebook even after this week’s exercise. Stay aware of the metaphors you come across, and keep jotting down the beautiful ones. Write them out longhand. Say them aloud. Memorize them. Study them. What makes them work so well?

How did you do? Did you enjoy the process of copying down in longhand beautiful metaphors created by other Creatives? Did you savor their language and images?

To encourage each other and grow a community of Curious Creatives, sign in from a google account so you can share your creation in the comment boxes below. Also, if you subscribe to this blog (submit your email address in the "Follow this Site by Email" box to the right), you will get an email update whenever a new exercise is added. Thanks for playing!