How to Pull Great Story Ideas out of Thin Air.
The mind’s a funny old thing. Sometimes it works like a dream, sometimes it goes on strike. Usually at the most inconvenient times like when you want an idea for a story with a deadline looming. But it will respond to some gentle coaxing. Here is a tactic to help get the cogs whirring away again.
Our creative minds are, in fact, our willing servants. The human race was made with a strong creative tendency and all we have to do is give a little push and ideas will suddenly appear, seemingly out of thin air. Oh, yes, it’s true!
Get mentally prepared.
This is where we get our minds in gear. Tell yourself inwardly that you are going to enjoy this exercise, even if it kills you, and you will, I guarantee, come up with a stonking idea for a story.
Get physically prepared.
Arm yourself with a pen and paper, or sit in front of your computer with Word up and running, ready to make notes.
Get ready to be creative.
OK, this is it, so I need your full attention. In your mind’s eye, picture somewhere you know well and like. A park, a town, even your own house. Now imagine you’ve discovered a hidden door you didn’t know was there. You creep through and there it is. A secret place. Another world. Wow! Now, tell me what do you see? Who do you see? What are they doing? What holds your attention? Moves you? Amuses you? Disturbs you? Make notes quickly and move on.
Maybe you see ordinary people, maybe you see giants, perhaps they’re pixies or gnomes, maybe they’re little green men with three eyes. And women of course. The women only have two eyes. The men need three eyes because … Well, let’s leave it there, we don’t want our imaginations running away with us. Just make notes.
Are they chatting, arguing, having a heated discussion, or just enjoying being together? What are they saying? What are they heatedly discussing? Latch on to something that moves or intrigues you and make notes.
What are they wearing? Fashionable 21st century clothes, torn ragged clothes, clothes from centuries ago? More notes.
Next introduce some action, something or someone that comes in from outside to change what is going on in the scene. The change brings a reaction in the characters you see, either for good or bad. Make notes.
Picture all this as clearly and colourfully as you can.
Here’s the psychology bit: This process is giving your mind the ‘food’ it needs to come up with an idea. Making those notes is of vital importance because it’s telling your mind that you are serious about this and it will oblige by working all the harder for you.
Keep going for as long as you like then stop, take a deep breath, and look at those notes.
The chances are you have the basis, to a greater or lesser extent, of a story. There’s also a chance that you will look at your notes and say ‘What a load of tosh!’ But before you discard them, I would urge you to look again, maybe after a nice cup of tea, and I’ll bet a pound to a penny there is some germ of an idea you can wrest from what you first see as a shambles.
Go for it!
——
Mervyn Love’s website for aspiring writers http://www.WritersReign.co.uk offers a mix of advice, resources, market information, competition listings, links to many other useful sites for writers and much more. Subscribe to his popular short course on Article Writing here:http://www.writersreign.co.uk/WRac.html