To recap Focus on Writing thus far, we have discussed Finding Time and Obliterating Distractions. In segment three, we will examine influences and inspirational tools to create ideas, to write.
For every writer, creating ideas can often lead to brainstorming blockages. When creativity stops flowing, writing becomes one of the most challenging aspects of a freelancer’s job. By adjusting how we look at the world and utilizing tools available, generating ideas becomes a natural part of the daily process. Simulating the senses is key.
As a writer, I reach for very specific tools to increase creativity: books, movies, music, nature and people.
Books offer an entirely new world from cover to cover. When I read fictional books, I’m carried away into a different land – forced to experience new emotions and visuals – all in my mind. I have picked up many books in my life that were less than desirable reads, but quickly learned to continue reading the story instead of closing the cover and reaching for another. By looking at the book as a learning tool, I’m able to see the author’s means of constructing sentences, images and emotions. Often times I will come across a word that I don’t know and stop long enough to discover the meaning.
Movies are similar to books in whisking you away to another time and place. Watching actors and actresses convey emotion in their faces offers a new description for the characters in a story you write. Taking time to delve completely into any character of your choosing will ignite emotions in yourself that may not have been felt for many years. Utilizing those emotions to rekindle memories brings a new dimension for ideas.
Music can speak to the soul. Riffs and melodies carefully construed will send a surge through your body from head to toe. Carried in that surge are ideas pertaining to the overall feeling a song has offered. Blasting the radio to 50’s and 60’s music elicits memories of road trips from my childhood. Descriptive scenes and ideas come flooding with the memories. Each word that pops into my mind is written down for reference later.
Nature is an amazing source of inspirational ideas. Walking along a stream, ocean or in the mountains provides a completely new dimension and experience for your mind. Breaking away from the monotony of life is a means to break any blockages or lack of inspiration you might feel. With any trip outside your home, carrying a pen and paper or digital recorder is necessary to jot ideas as they come.
People watching is an incredible art. Sitting in a crowded coffee shop with conversations all around can’t be beat. As people interact and their conversations pass through your ears, certain words or phrases can catch you off guard and offer one more opportunity to create. The young couple in the back discuss their pending trip to Europe, a truck driver a few chairs away talks about the loneliness of the road and the waitress behind the counter shares with coworkers that she’s moving across country to marry her Internet romance…
By observing the world with your senses, you will find that creating ideas comes with ease. Recognizing and writing everything down becomes the challenge. Fiction and non-fiction both stem from the world around us. How are you going to see the world around you?
Where do you find or create ideas for your writing?




Fantastic tips, you’re so right and these things are staring us in the face all the time! Mysti, these articles are so helpful, thank you!
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