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10 Ways to Start the Writing Process When You’re Staring at a Blank Page

10 Ways to Start the Writing Process When You’re Staring at a Blank Page

FromAnn Kroeker, Writing Coach


10 Ways to Start the Writing Process When You’re Staring at a Blank Page

FromAnn Kroeker, Writing Coach

ratings:
Length:
14 minutes
Released:
Sep 28, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

Louis L'Amour is attributed as saying, “Start writing, no matter what. The water does not flow until the faucet is turned on.”1



Sounds easy enough, but a lot of times we can’t even find the faucet. Or we find the faucet but fail to turn it on.



Either way, we want to write, but no words flow.



Is that you?



Are you ready to begin writing but you don’t know where to start—you don’t know how to get the words to flow?



I’ve got 10 options for you—ten faucets, if you will. I’ll bet one stands out more than the rest.



Pick one. Try it.



See if it gets those words flowing.



1. Start with a memory



Think back to an event that seems small yet feels packed with emotion. You don’t have to fully understand it. Just remember it. Something changed due to that event. The change may have been subtle or seismic, but you emerged from it a different person. 



The simple prompt “I remember” can get you started. Use it as a journal entry and see where it takes you, or go ahead and start writing something more substantial.



When you remember and recreate these scenes from your past, you’ll learn from them. I experienced this when I wrote a short scene in this style, called One Lone Duck Egg.







2. Start with a photo



Photos can whisk us back to another place and time, whether as recently as last week or as long ago as childhood.



Pull a photo from your collection of family photos, physical or digital. 



Write in response to the scene. Recreate it. Let the memories unfold. 



You could be in the photo, or not. 



You could write the story behind the moment, or elaborate on a particular person in the scene. 



What do you think was happening? Why were you—or weren’t you—there? What does this say to you today?



Another approach is to combine words with images to create a photo essay. 



Back in 2011, I walked around the farm where I grew up and snapped photos. Each time, a fragment of thought came to mind, a flash of a memory. 



When I got home, I pieced it together to come up with Dancing in the Loft.



3. Start with art



Art ignites imagination. Whether you invent a story behind the piece of art you choose, or you document your response to it, you’ll end up with an interesting project. 



One of my creative writing professors in college gave us a similar assignment to write poetry from art. It’s possible she was trying to introduce us to ekphrastic poetry,2 which, according to the Lantern Review Blog,3 is “written in conversation with a work(s) of visual art.” 



But she took a less formal approach, asking us to find some art, study it carefully, and write a poem.



I used a small, framed print of an Andrew Wyeth painting as inspiration.



I studied the boy sitting in the grass and imagined a possible scenario leading up to the moment Wyeth captured. As I was finishing the poem and typing it up, I realized I needed to include information about Wyeth’s work. I turned the frame around and fortunately I found the date and name of the painting. Wyeth named it “Faraway,”4 and I coincidentally called my poem "Runaway.”5



Spend time with the art and see where it leads.



4. Start with an object



I once wrote about an old, worn knob that topped the post at the bottom of our stairs. 



I loved the worn knob for being worn. All the stain was rubbed off one side of it from the years before we owned the house. Like the previous owners, we swooshed around that newel post, running our palms around the knob every single time we ran up or down the stairs. 



When we decided to replace the railing, I begged our carpenter—who is also a friend of ours—to save the knob.



He did.



And I wrote about it.



Another time I wrote about a precious soapstone vase I played with as a child. The consequences of that day of play lasted a long, long time.



My friend and coauthor Charity Singleton Craig uses objects (and places) to launch a “chain of remembrance.” She explains in her newsletter "The Wonder Report"...
Released:
Sep 28, 2021
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Reach your writing goals (and have fun!) by being more curious, creative, and productive. Ann provides practical tips and motivation for writers at all stages to improve their skills, pursue publishing, and expand their reach. Ann keeps most episodes short and focused so writers only need a few minutes to collect ideas, inspiration, resources and recommendations to apply to their work. She incorporates interviews from publishing professionals and authors like Allison Fallon, Ron Friedman, Shawn Smucker, and Jennifer Dukes Lee to bring additional insight. Ann and her guests cover everything from self-editing and goal-setting to administrative and scheduling challenges. Subscribe for ongoing coaching to advance your writing life and career. More at annkroeker.com.