Writer's Block Exercise Week 17
Got Writer’s Block?
Yeah, it happens to the best of us. Life gets in the way and your brain is taken in another direction and before you know it, it’s been days or weeks since you last looked at that book you’re trying to write. You’ve forgotten little details. What eye color did you give your hero? What town was your heroine born in? Perhaps you need to jumpstart your creative mojo, and that's what this series is designed for. Not to explain writer's block, but to help you move in a different direction.

Details are important, but sometimes they came to you later, as you go back and edit. Many times I’ve even used my own experiences to spice up the mundane day-to-day routine of my characters. Don’t be afraid to put some of your own life down on the page.
What this exercise does is asks you to look at one of those moments you may not like, or where you're stuck, and change how you look at it. Maybe put yourself in your character's shoes. How would you act? Or what would you say?
#17 Magnify
Up close, everything looks different. Zoom in to focus on a moment, a detail or an emotion.

> Extend the moment. What if a given event took a day rather than a minute? What if it took a year?
> Imagine your hero is incredibly nearsighted. How would your story change if she could only see things an inch from her nose?
When you look closely at a moment or idea, you discover truths and textures that might otherwise go unnoticed. (Chickens are basically velociraptors. Velcro is nothing but desperate, grabbing hands.)
Your hero may be holding the metaphorical magnifying glass – or perhaps he’s the one being examined, each little action perceived differently than intended. Either way, lenses distort what we see.
A powerful lens can even focus light so intensely it burns.

Happy Writing!

***John August designed these cards to help writers fix plot holes, spice up stock characters and rethink your themes. They, of course, do not guarantee you’ll get published or that you’ll become the next J.K. Rowling, and of course they are only a tool to help you think outside the box. I make no monetary gain with them nor do I expect anything in return. I do not own the contents in these cards. If you're interested in them, here's the amazon link: https://www.amazon.com/Writer-Emergency-Pack/dp/B00R6ZLIOY/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1502046610&sr=8-2&keywords=john+august
Published on May 01, 2019 01:00
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