Brainwriting or Morning Pages

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Mitu100@
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Joined: Tue Jan 07, 2025 4:30 am

Brainwriting or Morning Pages

Post by Mitu100@ »

Three workouts for your linguistic creativity

Morning pages became popular thanks to Julia Cameron, who wrote about them in detail in her book The Artist's Way. The idea is that you write three pages by hand in the morning immediately after waking up, and instead of putting them down and thinking about what you want to write, you simply write down what is going through your head. Then put france telegram screening them away and start the day. Morning pages are a kind of " brain dump", a place to store everything that moves you, worries you or makes you happy. They are not intended to plan your day (although that sometimes happens) or to delight posterity as literary outpourings. They are a good exercise in finding your writing voice linguistically and also take the strain off your brain, because what you write down cannot be forgotten - they literally clear your head.

The morning pages are a special form of brainwriting. You can use it whenever you have a topic or a problem. Just write down what exactly annoys you when you have created a product and it is not received as well as you would like. Set yourself a time goal (at least 15 minutes) or a certain number of pages that you want to fill before you stop. This way you can ensure that you get every last thought down on paper - and that may be the solution to your problem, but without forcing yourself to research it, you would never find it.

word chain game
The word chain game is a wonderful exercise for discovering completely new aspects of a topic. I'm always amazed at where my brain takes me when I play it. When playing the word chain game, simply add one noun to the next - there should already be a connection between the two words. My example shows you what this can look like:
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