Finding words that rhyme are only 10% of Rhyming. The real work is getting those words that rhyme to work in your sentences and rhythms (if you have these too) so it makes sense for your overall story or poem.
Rhyming dictionaries help the 1st part... you build skill in the 2nd part.
Finish this well-know poem with 2 lines that...
A)... are sad
B)... are funny
C)... are grandma wisdom
DEBRIEF:
1. What was most difficult about writing these 2 lines? Why do you think that is?
2. What was easiest about writing these 2 lines? Why do you think that is?
3. What was your process? Did it change (revise) as you proceeded?
4. Use your process and write one last time to get to LOVE.
In preparation for my Remembrance Storybook Challenge, I'm thinking about how people remember loved ones.
Remembrance is both WHAT you remember of someone and HOW you remember it.
And it reveals a ton about the person remembering, the person being remembered, and their relationship.
Exploring this may be a creative muscle exercise, but it can also be helpful to better understand a...
Many people "brainstorm" as if the only ideas they can put on their brainstorming resource are those they already have experienced or know. And to some extent this is true...
But believing "I can only gather ideas already in my brain," limits the creativity (and my extension resource) of brainstorming.
Therefore, it's important we consider ideas NOT ALREADY in our brains. How do we do that...
One way is OBSERVATION.
Here is one exercise.... take a little time to just observe somewhere.
The list could go on... but you get my drift.
Then set your OBSERVING to a purpose...
Being an author, coach, cheerleader and lover of STORYBOOKS... I hold this perspective close.
Thus I believe that to envision a principle in picture form may be more powerful than any quote posted on a wall. For it requires we see this quote in action.
Therefore today's creativity muscle exercise is going to have to you VISUALIZE and create an image.
For those who are about to hit... NEXT because you believe you can't draw, WAIT. Take a deep breath and realize this is not anything you have to share... ever.
The...
Have you heard that quote, "Walk a day in her shoes..." well, this is all about perspective. It's easy to judge, misinterpret, marginalize, criticize and condescend when we don't understand. And most of what we don't understand is attributed to being shackled to a single perspective.
Taking the time to intentionally walk in another's perspective is powerful and absolutely necessary if you want to be a good writer.
WHY? you might ask....
2 Reasons...
1. Every character has his/her own motives, which you must understand AND
2. Every character is NOT YOU. Meaning they respond to even the same motive differently depending on their own experiences.
Thus you have to be willing and capable of walking in another's perspective to write characters and stories that impact.
If you like movies, check out VANTAGE POINT. It tells a full story by showing the same 60 minutes from 8-9 different...
This is posting on July 4th, Independence Day for the United States of America.
Since this holiday is a profound reminder of the VALUE of FREEDOM, I thought I would have us consider how this value is experienced by our characters.
While for our country it's freedom from Tyranny, what does it look and sound like for an individual person?
...
Let's consider an example...
--> A simple idea like communicating to someone near you that they smell badly.
First, the actual words...
Second, the tone...
Third, the delivery...
Can you begin to picture how each combination could communicate the same idea, slightly differently?
Can you also...
Recently I watched "The Making of The LAST JEDI," the number 8 film in the Star Wars series. I'm a diehard Star Wars fan as I remember watching the 1st one in the theater at 6 years old (which gives away my age) and thus find it a joy to watch the "making of documentaries."
In this one the writer/ director, Rian Johnson, walked us through his process. Since he was BOTH writer and director, he had interesting light to shed on the characters, plot, themes, and settings (the major legs of any story).
One of the most profound things he said was this, "I started with each character and asked WHAT DO THEY WANT?"
The answer to this question is deep and may or may not be in the awareness of the character. But dig harder enough and you find a core WANT which becomes the driving motivator for this character.
Thus today, we are going to dig into a "CORE WANT."
They say a picture is worth 1000 words...
In the world of storybooks, that sounds about right. A 30 page illustrated book... that's 30,000 words plus the words written on the page and you have the equivalent of a personal development book.
But let's face it pictures are way more fun... So, let's use a few to get your creativity muscle working out!!
Below are a four pictures from Unsplash, a free photo website, with the photographers listed. Allow yourself about 90 -120 seconds per photograph and WRITE FROM the picture. (The purpose of short time on 4 different pics is to not allow your mind too long to analyze the picture, but to run with whatever first emerges from it) Here are few questions to get you thinking...
I was watching a re-run of Friends this afternoon... you know the episode where Joey writes the "Recommendation Letter to the Adoption Agency" for Monica and Chandler. Joey used the thesaurus on EVERY WORD of his letter. He wanted to sound smart.
But isn't that ONE KIND OF COMEDY... in attempting to sound smart, he sounds ridiculous.
This opened up a handful of creativity moments for me, which I will explore over the next few workouts :) For today...
Writing comedy can simply be a person trying to be or do something that isn't "in their wheelhouse." For example...
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I look forward to sending you future blogs about learning in the 21st century and keeping you up to date on what we are doing to build with this understanding.
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