Setting aside time each day for reading and writing is a highly effective method for honing your writing skills. What if you find it difficult to dedicate time to write lengthy paragraphs every day? Or perhaps you’re dealing with a case of writer’s block?
Writing prompts and exercises are quick and effortless ways to work writing into your daily schedule. Plus, they can supply a dose of creativity and inspiration you need for an upcoming major writing endeavor.
Let’s take a look at the 5 writing prompts we’re sharing today:
1. Give It Life
Pick an inanimate object that you can see. It can be anything—a lamp, a knife, a picture frame, a highchair, a shoe, or a pencil. Now write a few lines from its perspective. What is its personality like? How does its everyday view affect it? What are its worries, its joys, its dreams? This could take a humorous spin, or become surprisingly introspective.
2. Map It Out
If you are currently starting out a fictional project, think of your main character’s house. If you are beginning a memoir or are not working on anything specific, think of a house you grew up in or a place that was special to you (perhaps it was grandma’s house or your treehouse or the library). Draw a rough sketch of the place, and then label everything you can. Be specific, and think about what it says about the character (or you). If this was a special place to you as a child, how did that change the way you saw the furniture? What are the meanings behind these ordinary furnishings? What do they say about the person who lives there or goes there?
3. Get into the Backstory
Pick out a stranger you have seen or met recently—the cable repairman, the woman behind you in line at the café, a child who passes you on the sidewalk. Describe them as specifically as you can using all five senses. Who are they to their loved ones? What have they been through that made them the way they are?
4. Explore the Other Side of the Story
Think of a story you know well. This could be a fairy tale, a movie, or a book you recently read. Pick someone other than the protagonist and write a paragraph from their perspective. How do they see the events? Can you flip it around the make the antagonist’s actions seem right? Or could the hapless sidekick really be the hero of the story? While this is one of the more challenging writing prompts on our list, it can be a really fun way to switch things up.
5. Make a Letter List
This is super quick but will broaden your vocabulary to think of words you rarely use. Pick a letter, set a timer for three minutes, and write as many words as you can that start with that letter. Don’t think, just write. Keep writing until the timer goes off. We can too often get stuck in a rut of leaning on the same words over and over, but this will bring out some unexpected options. Keep the list and challenge yourself to include some in your next project.
With these 5 writing prompts in your proverbial toolbox, you will see how fun and easy it can be to train your craft. No matter what you’re writing, it’s good practice to uncork that inhibition to put words on paper. Be imaginative, lose the fear, and let the words flow.
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thank you, thank you, thank you!
You’re welcome, Jim! I hope you can use these exercises!
I love your writing prompts ideas. These will definitely help me get my thoughts flowing.
Great to hear, Rena!
Oooh! You hit the nail on the head. No 5. is my weaknest point in creative writing, now i have an idea on how to sort it out. Thank you and be blessed
Oh I know how that is, Connie! I am so happy you found something that spoke to you!