I just finished The Practice of Writing, a 5 week, online writing course run by Alice Bradley of Finslippy. I first started reading Finslippy when I was beginning doula work, and I ran into the funniest birth story in the history of the world. I knew then that Alice Bradley was destined to be my very good friend. She didn't know it yet, of course. After five weeks of a writing class she still doesn't know it. But whatever, she'll come around eventually.
Despite not yet being my very good friend, Alice Bradley is an excellent writer, a good teacher and a very encouraging critic. If you write anything: a blog, short stories, poetry, annotated shopping lists, then I strongly encourage you to give The Practice of Writing a try.
Our last assignment for the course was to produce fifteen writing prompts of our very own. It was Alice's little nudge to get us out of the nest. I plan on sifting through what I've written for the course and looking for gold nuggets I can refine to share here, or expand into something more. So, as a first offering I give you my very own fifteen writing prompts. The rules: Don't think, just write. Give yourself fifteen minutes. You can write poetry or prose, fiction or non-fiction, in any format you like. If you use them, I'd love to hear about it.
Despite not yet being my very good friend, Alice Bradley is an excellent writer, a good teacher and a very encouraging critic. If you write anything: a blog, short stories, poetry, annotated shopping lists, then I strongly encourage you to give The Practice of Writing a try.
Our last assignment for the course was to produce fifteen writing prompts of our very own. It was Alice's little nudge to get us out of the nest. I plan on sifting through what I've written for the course and looking for gold nuggets I can refine to share here, or expand into something more. So, as a first offering I give you my very own fifteen writing prompts. The rules: Don't think, just write. Give yourself fifteen minutes. You can write poetry or prose, fiction or non-fiction, in any format you like. If you use them, I'd love to hear about it.
- Write about a time when you believed you had magical powers.
- In the process of cleaning out a family member's home, you have found a beloved object from your childhood. What is it? What has it been doing since you saw it last?
- What keeps you awake at three in the morning?
- If you had to move your whole household into one room, how would you do it?
- In the process of changing the light switch covers in your home, you find a note from the previous owners. What does it say?
- You have fifteen minutes to change my mind about a contentious political topic that is important to you. Go.
- On a walk in the woods, you discover a path of flower petals leading in a direction you've never been. What do you do?
- Write about a time when you wished the earth would open up and swallow you whole.
- What is the one thing that tells you that you are home.
- Once upon a time, there was a girl who lived in a small house next to a big river . . .
- You have been given a four week, all-expenses paid vacation for four. Where do you go? Who do you bring? What will you do?
- Joey was sure the disco ball hadn't been hanging in the basement yesterday . . .
- Write about a time when you made something better.
- Write a birth story.
- A stranger hands you fifty one-dollar bills and tells you to give them away one at a time, then leaves. What do you do with the money?
Thank you for that. Aforementioned birth story made me laugh and laugh and laugh. :)
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome.
DeleteI'm sorry I don't get to see more of your writing these days.
Fun prompts! :) You may get me to write more often yet. Maybe. ;)
ReplyDeleteI hope so. I want to read it!
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