How to Write When You’re Just Too Busy (part two of a series)

Continuing our series on tips about writing when you’re busy: If you have a little bit more time and can’t handle a full-pledged writing project yet, here are two writing exercises you can work on over the weekend:

1 The Q&A
With yourself as the subject, come up with five to ten questions on a particular subject then answer them as if you were being interviewed. It’s a fun way to put your thoughts down in writing and record how you feel and think about topics relevant to your life.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

It can be in the realm of writing itself—books, literature, creative process, writing goals, favorite authors, etc.—or more personal as goals, love life, places to visit and why, etc. Imagine yourself as an interviewer and develop interesting questions and have fun (or be serious) writing your answers. You can reply in as little as one to three sentences or as long as you like (if you have time).

TIP: You can do this also when you’re developing character sketches for your novel or short story and you want to find out what motivates them, what they’re thinking, etc.

2 Wikipedia Plot
We use Wikipedia to look things up, especially when we’re pressed for time. This informative site is written by the public, for the public. Everything’s almost there (although our teachers and editors would prefer us to use other sources for our assignments).wikipedia

For most of us, it serves as a jump-off point to deeper research because Wikipedia entries provide a general background (some with online citations or references!) and a bird’s eye view about a particular subject.

For this exercise, consider the entries for movies and TV shows, which contain comprehensive plots and character low-downs. Why not create your own little Wikipedia entry for your story, especially if you’re having trouble with the plot or with where your story is heading. Summarize what will happen in your story the way Wikipedia writes it—action-packed, informative, comprehensive but general, easy to read.

You can spend as a little over 30 minutes condensing things encyclopedia-style or hours plotting your story with the format of this site as your parameter or framework. Then when you feel you’re back on track and your story is beginning to shape, write your story down.

But just like the warnings by our teachers, your little Wikipedia writing exercise is not a substitute for actual hard work. Use it only when you want to explore your story and find out before hand where you want to take it.

And then find the time to really write.

Advertisement

Leave a Comment

Filed under The Writer's Craft, The Writing Life

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out / Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out / Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out / Change )

Connecting to %s