Tip: If you are stuck in mid-draft, try changing the point of view for a few paragraphs to see if that moves things along. Like, the cat, or the neighbor, or the mailbox.
© CWC 2013
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Tip: If you are stuck in mid-draft, try changing the point of view for a few paragraphs to see if that moves things along. Like, the cat, or the neighbor, or the mailbox.
© CWC 2013
All rights reserved
Dear Friends of CWC: I have added a new tab called “Your Writings” to the site. I want to develop it for the homeschool population, but am asking you to try it out first. I have posted a prompt, very similar to what you might find at The Nervous Breakdown site.
This page is password protected and will not stay up for very long. I basically want to see how it will work and if the idea will be suitable for youth. Since youth might be accessing it, I will ask that you keep your posts to PG-13 or below. Thank you.
2013 test
CWC
2:37 PM: ok, I put the Your Writing page under Stuff We Do. Same password. Play on!
Please use the following 8 words in your story or poem of no more than 100 words:
mirror, spit, letter, furniture, zipper, talon, mint, bulb
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Write about a noise or a silence that will not go away.
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Those “happy lights:” discuss.
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First: Think of an object that you lost as a child, an object that was really special to you and that you were never reunited with. My object was a seal fur pin that I left in a gas station bathroom in the midwest on a cross country trip. My grandmother had given it to me. I might have been about seven when I lost it. It still brings me a little sting when I think of it. The object you lost should bring about a feeling like that.
Next: Write a story or poem from the point of view of the person who found that object and what they did with it. In the case of my seal fur pin, perhaps the gas station attendant threw it away, or maybe he or she pocketed and brought it home as a present for his or her child.
Have fun with this!
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I had a weird dream last night. What was it?
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Today is the feast day of St. Thomas Aquinas, a famous Catholic scholar and priest who lived in the 13th century. He wrote many many works about God, Jesus Christ, natural law, and human behavior. On his deathbed, he was reported to have mused about his writings, “It’s all straw.”
Play around with this phrase “It’s all straw.” Leaving aside, or not, what you know or think about St. Thomas Aquinas, or religion, define “straw.” Define a world or body of thought as straw. Keeping working on it. Perhaps you could start a poem with that phrase as a first line, or use it as a refrain in a song/poem. Or use the phrase it in a fictional piece in some way.
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Torch Song Sunday
Here’s a litte snippet from a popular song that you may or may not know. It’s enough to get you started. What’s the resolution? Love is messy, cruel, unkind, and, the only thing that makes any sense. Does this make sense to you? To one of your characters? Need a good cry after a breakup?
“A hundred thousand reasons why I should walk away, and a hundred thousand more make me stay…….
I can’t help but love you, you know how I am…..you’re the only dream I understand……”
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It’s Robert Burns’s birthday today, the famous Scottish poet. In Scotland there are all kinds of rituals that take place on his birthday — including drinking lots of alcohol and eating strange food (haggis), and wearing strange outfits (kilts). Some of these might seem strange to us and some might not. Take out your anthology of British and European poetry and brush up on Robert Burns. He really was quite a force in poetry and in Scottish politics of the 18th century. And, some time this weekend, try a new food. Make notes
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