Today a man knocked on my door and asked for a small donation towards the local swimming pool.
I gave him a glass of water.
Today a man knocked on my door and asked for a small donation towards the local swimming pool.
I gave him a glass of water.
Two burglars stole a calendar last night and they each got six months.
Patient: Doctor! I have a serious problem. I can never remember what I just said.
Doctor: When did you first notice this problem?
Patient: What problem?
Musician: “Did you hear my last recital?”
Friend: “I hope so.”
When you feel that creeping self-doubt, acknowledge it. Write down your feelings in your journal in your journal… and then continue with your writing.”
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Ignore every current trend and movement; pay no attention to what is presently most admired or most mocked; beware fervent admiration of any writer, however lauded, or any style, however praised. Think only of how you can make your writing most perfect, and most perfectly your own. – Sarah Perry
Sometimes the hardest thing in writing a story is where to start. You don’t need to have a great idea, you just have to put pen to paper. Start with a bad idea, start with the wrong direction, start with a character you don’t like, something positive will come out of it. – Marion Deuchars
The first thing to ask when writing a sentence is ‘What am I trying to do?’ ~ Stanley Fish
“I need only walk for 15 minutes or so and in that space, I will likely discover something. I just have to be looking and listening.” ~ Kayo Chingony
Write down ideas, all the time. Keep a little notebook handy (Nabokov carried around index cards) and write down ideas for stories or articles or novels or characters. Write down snippets of conversation that you hear. Write down plot twists and visual details and fragments of song lyrics or poems that move you. Having these ideas written down helps, because they can inspire you or actually go directly into your writing. I like to keep a list of post ideas for my blog, and I continually add to it.