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Printed from https://writing.com/main/newsletters/action/archives/id/11909
Noticing Newbies: April 12, 2023 Issue [#11909]




 This week: An Inspiration Situation
  Edited by: GeminiGem🐾 Author IconMail Icon
                             More Newsletters By This Editor  Open in new Window.

Table of Contents

1. About this Newsletter
2. A Word from our Sponsor
3. Letter from the Editor
4. Editor's Picks
5. A Word from Writing.Com
6. Ask & Answer
7. Removal instructions

About This Newsletter

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Hi! I'm GeminiGem🐾 and I am your guest editor for this issue of the Noticing Newbie Newsletter.




Word from our sponsor

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Letter from the editor

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AN INSPIRATION SITUATION



Which one of these options best describes you?

*Checkv* 1. I have a hundred writing ideas swirling around in my head at any one time! I have so many ideas that I have problems settling on one to work on.

*Checkv* 2. Ideas come to me spontaneously anytime, anywhere. I keep a notebook of bits and pieces to use in future writing.

*Checkv* 3. I feel the need to write and will actively hunt for inspiration to fill that need.

*Checkv* 4. Some version of any of the options above, depending on the whim of my muse, the direction the wind is blowing, and the alignment of the planets.

There is not an incorrect answer. There may not even be a correct answer for that matter.

If you struggle with inspiration or ideas for your writing in any way, you are in good company, I assure you. WdC has some things to help you out.

Writing Prompts: In the left-hand column, scroll down to Writing.Com Tool and click on it. Then click on Writing Prompts. Challenge yourself! Grab the first one you see and roll with it. You can also keep scrolling for additional prompts.

Contests: Even if you don't like contests, don't want to enter a contest, or don't want to be tied down to a contest, you can still glean some inspiration from them. Love the contest prompt but hate the deadline? Give it a whirl anyway. The important thing is that you find something you want to write. Love the theme but find word count limits too restrictive? Don't let that inspiration pass you by. Fire up your keyboard and see where it takes you.

Work backwards to build your writing. Start with one important element and expand from there. Take the snippet of a conversation you hear between two people you don't know and weave a story where that bit conversation is very, very crucial. Pick a title of a story that would attract your attention if you saw it, and write something that would have that title. Pick an interesting name and then write something with the character that fits (or maybe doesn't fit) that name. It may not be your usual way of starting out, but it may be the thing that jars your creative process into inspiration.

What inspires you? I would love to hear about it!





Editor's Picks

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Contest Clues Open in new Window. (E)
List of WdC Writing Contests, Challenges, Activities. Clues To What's Open, What's Closed!
#2221492 by GeminiGem🐾 Author IconMail Icon



 Feminism Open in new Window. (E)
Short poem about sisterhood and being proud of ourselves and other women for standing up.
#2293851 by Mandy Writes Author IconMail Icon


 Uncle Louis' Sepulchre Open in new Window. (E)
A slain war hero returns to bury his body.
#2293836 by bn skinner Author IconMail Icon


 Just a Hallway Crush.... Open in new Window. (E)
hallway crushes can be hard, do i love you, do you love me?
#2293798 by Grayson Author IconMail Icon


 Chosen As Queen Open in new Window. (E)
A story idea that randomly came to me.
#2293723 by Hallee R. Krupp Author IconMail Icon


 Murder's Son Open in new Window. (GC)
Tyrone discovers dark secrets about his life he never knew.
#2293331 by Delia Parsnip Author IconMail Icon


A PLACE TO FIND INSPIRATION

Image Protector
STATIC
Contest Clues Open in new Window. (E)
List of WdC Writing Contests, Challenges, Activities. Clues To What's Open, What's Closed!
#2221492 by GeminiGem🐾 Author IconMail Icon

 
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Ask & Answer

From my last Noticing Newbies Newsletter "Now What?Open in new Window.:

Jtpete 1986
This was absolutely the perfect piece I needed to read right now. Thank you.

I could ask for no higher praise! Glad you found the newsletter helpful.


Damon Nomad
Excellent advice on editing, which I did not learn for the longest time! I particularly want to emphasize what you said about setting a piece aside for a day or more and listening to it as well as reading it. I use WORD read-aloud in the later stages of editing, sometimes reading along sometimes only the sound. You can multi-task a bit, exercise and listen.

Those are some good ideas. Things often sound differently out loud than they do in our heads, lol

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