Articles
about Overcoming Writer's Block!
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Describe in Detail
Describe the
obvious and normally ignored... in
detail
Describe something, out loud and into a recording device or
by written description. Something nearby in your
environment. For example, you can describe the floor, the
desk, stuff on the desk or floor, the wall, that book,
etc.; anything mundane that you have not even noticed for
days or months.
Important: Describe it in excruciating,
increasing and precise detail.
Start with the obvious and then go deeper and deeeeper with
the description.
Describe as though your describing to a blind person, or an
alien. Go into the context, reason for it being, the
texture, the odor, the way the light plays on it, the
shadows follow it, the feelings it evokes in you, the
usefulness of it, the problems with it, the good, the bad,
and the ugly, etc.
Describe any and all details that you can immediately sense
- see, hear, feel, taste and smell... and any and all
extensions as to purpose, creation, manufacture, asthetic,
reason, etc.
Describe using just one or two of your senses and then all
of them together. Look at what’s there and what’s hinted
at.
What does that shadow reveal... look for what’s different,
what’s deeper, what’s surprising, what’s funny...
Here's the focus that turns this from silly exercise into a
doorway to original writing:
Be alert for any insights or flashes, especially if they
are in surprising directions and follow them like Sherlock
Holmes.
Write the flashes down and let them lead you into writing
still more. Once you are writing just keep describing all
hunches and nudges. Let your unconscious mind bring fresh
insights and relativity by combining what you want to be
working on with the mundane description. Your unconscious
mind is a master at creating context from totally unrelated
things. This describing exercise is training in paying
attention to those new contexts and resulting
insights.