Sometimes the inspirations that we resist most in our fiction writing are those from our own lives: they seem too specific or mundane to include. But what if we investigated our own lived experience in order to become more creative, treating it as a treasure trove? How would that change our approaches?
Start with freewriting (or stream of consciousness writing). Why? Because many practitioners, such as Cameron and Goldberg, advise using this tool, in order to bypass the ‘judge’ that tells us we can’t write, and to draw out interesting phrases or ideas that can be developed later.
You might also want to use mind mapping, which is an accessible way to get ideas down on paper. Writing lists is another seemingly simple form of idea generation that frees us from ‘the judge’. In brief, here’s what we did:
And here’s how to expand it:
Whichever aspect of the Creative Plunder Mind Map you chose (and you might have done places of course) it has a place associated with it. Focus on the place. Hone in on somewhere in particular. If you’ve already done place, move to a different room or adjacent space or have the narrator walk somewhere, or hone in on the detail even more. We’re talking: from the POV of someone in the room looking at the detail, not someone in a helicopter flying overhead. Remember were deliberately using the senses.Some kind of rite of passage happened in this place: fictionalise entirely or adapt. Change what happened somehow or make it up. But it has to be a rite of passage.
Of course, a rite of passage could be formal and public – wedding, funeral, or informal and public – buying your first pint, or intimate and personal (but also culturally significant) such as a young woman’s first period. This is ripe for discussion with students. Rites of passage also work as hooks in a plot.Use a notebook. What are the trajectories, narratives, stories, pathways these ideas suggest? (How could you join them together?) Get all of your ideas down in the early stages. Try not to discount an idea because it’s silly. When you’re sifting them later, circle the simpler ideas but don’t cross out the others!
Buzan, T. (2009) The Mind Map Book. London: BBC Active.
Cameron, J. (2006) The Sound of Paper. New York: Penguin
Goldberg, N. (2010) Writing Down the Bones. New York: Shambhala Press.
Tondeur, L. (2012) ‘Small Steps to Creative Thinking’. Creative Teaching and Learning Magazine. 3:2, 35 – 38. Available from: http://bit.ly/1qGpVu6