Tag Archives: writing

Expand Your Horizons

file7601342898452Journaling has many purposes, and best of all, it’s fine to change direction or add a new purpose any time you wish.  Today, I’d like you to consider some exploration in your journal. Try writing in new and different ways! Experiment a little bit, and you may discover a hidden talent or a new passion. Who knows, you might even find a path to making your journal profitable! If you’ve never tried any of these types of entries, perhaps now is the time.

For many, journal entries are an opportunity for self-exploration. Writers share their innermost thoughts and feelings in a place where no one else will look without invitation. It’s a safe way to express yourself. The entries typically take the form of a monologue, with the author saying whatever is on his or her mind.

Some use their journal as a record of what happened recently. It serves as a diary of sorts, and the writer can look back years later to see what was important in life back then and also get an assist to recall. Friends and loved ones can enjoy the family stories from long ago when the journal is shared.

Your journal can serve as a repository for ideas and inspirations. Describe your genius thought in detail, then it will be available for action when the time is right. This is a great way to capture moments when you see clearly and know just what you want to try out or accomplish.

Try using your journal to record your progress through new experiences. Tell the steps you take as well as your thoughts and feelings, the progress you’ve made, and what you would do differently next time. Record your insights and your challenges. This type of journal can easily turn into a “been-there-done-that” publishable book!  In fact, you could journal about the process of taking your journal entries to publication….

How long has it been since you’ve written poetry? Your journal is a great place to explore the many creative ways that words can be put onto paper. You can try your hand at the traditional types of poetry, with rhyme, rhythm and structure, or you can write free verse, or anything else you wish.

A descriptive essay can be a lot of fun for a journal entry. Choose an event or activity that you truly love, and write to intentionally engage the five senses. Use the most vivid language you can muster, and take yourself (and other readers) into the scene. Include the smells, tastes, feelings, and sounds as well as the description of things that you see.

Novels and short stories can spring from journal entries, too. Make something up out of whole cloth, or start with a real, concrete experience or thing. It can be fun to create a backstory for a character that you’ve read about somewhere else, or to tell the imaginary story of someone you happened to see on the street. Take the perspective of a pet or a common household item like a shoe or a potato and tell about its day.

Sharpen your persuasive writing skills by practicing on yourself. See if you can write to convince your internal editor to change his or her mind about an issue. Write in support of things you believe in, then try writing in support of the other side (it’s a whole lot more challenging!).

Record your hopes and dreams. What do you wish for more than anything in the whole wide world? Why? And how can you turn these dreams into reality? Or should you?

This just begins to scratch the surface of ways you can be creative with your journal entries.  The key is to remember that you are not locked into ANYTHING.  Your journal is your own, and you can write in any way you wish. Set your sights on a new horizon and push the limits sometimes.

Topic Ideas: Week of 11-23-15

Here are some ideas for your journal this week.

Focuses for a new journal:

  • Thanksgiving traditions
  • Your family
  • Your blessings

Journal prompts:

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  • What do you remember about Thanksgiving from your childhood?
  • Which person from your family would you love to pull out of the past and celebrate with this week?
  • Have you ever shared Thanksgiving with someone who was not related to you by blood or marriage? Why or why not?
  • How important are traditional foods in your household? Why is that?
  • Have you ever helped with a community or charity Thanksgiving feast? What was that experience like for you?
  • What are your feelings about “Black Friday” and the traditional shopping spree that follows Thanksgiving?
  • How does the run-up to Christmas look to you right now? Are you excited, bored, dreading it? What will you be doing over the next four weeks?

Remember you can get a daily prompt for six weeks by signing up below:

Five Reasons to Try Free Writing

abstract-895395_1920Sometimes we lose sight of the many ways we can write. We get so caught up in trying to make our writing perfect and edited (sometimes even on the first try!) that we forget other purposes. Not all writing needs to be perfected. It doesn’t even all have to make sense!

There is a technique called “free writing” that can be a huge help in improving fluency and breaking out of writer’s block. Here’s how it works: Set a timer for a relatively short period, say five minutes. Put your pen to the paper (or fingers to keyboard) and start writing. Write about anything you want, but keep the pen or fingers moving for the entire time you have set. Do not stop for anything! The result will be a stream of consciousness sort of work that can give you some surprising insights. The key is to keep writing without pausing.  It’s even ok to write “I don’t know what to write, I don’t know what to write, I don’t know what to write…”

Want to improve your overall fluency (the ease with which the words come out)? Just gradually increase the time you spend on free writing each day. Move from five minutes to seven, from ten to twenty, and so forth. Move at your own pace. Stay with one time as long as you wish. Stay with one time until you feel comfortable there.

What can free writing do for you? Here are just a few benefits:

  1. Free Writing will improve your fluency. If you stick with it, you will be able to write more efficiently. Ideas will flow more quickly and you will be able to think of just the right words more smoothly.
  2. Free Writing will build the habit of writing. Set aside time each and every day for free writing, and you will also be building the habit of writing in your journal or working on other writing projects.
  3. Free Writing is a great way to warm up. If you find yourself having trouble getting started with your writing, free writing can limber up the brain so that you can move on with your writing tasks for the day, including journaling or working on other projects.
  4. Free Writing will free ideas to fly. When you dis-inhibit your brain, you will find that your ideas flow like a faucet. Look back on your free writing over time, and I promise there will be seeds for more considered writing later.
  5. Free Writing will provide practice with skills. Need to sharpen your editing and proofreading skills? Go back and proofread your free writing. Take those ideas and polish them. Correct the grammar, fix the spelling, and combine sentences. Spiff up the word choices and clarify things. Just wait until AFTER your free writing time to do so.