. It's also posted on the New World Library website.
KICKING IN THE WALL 5 Minute Exercises: A
Key to Overcoming Writers Block
Early
in her career, Patti Smith got writer’s block: “I would go as far as I could
and hit a wall, my own imagined limitations,” she writes in her memoir Just Kids. And then her friend Sam
Shepard gave her some good advice, “When you hit a wall, just kick it in.”
Most writers have
at one time or another faced a wall, a case of writer’s block built of our own
doubts and fears. I love the idea of kicking in your own wall, taking action,
not becoming the long suffering artist wringing your hands and waiting for a
visit from the muse. No, you kick in
that wall, break it down, smash it to smithereens – and write.
One of the biggest
misconceptions that new writers have is that you need to be inspired in order
to write. Inspiration is a wonderful and necessary thing of course, but it has
a way of arriving when you’re already at work. To get my students working I
give them five minute writing exercises. These can be prompts of one word (for
example, turtle), or lines from a
poem (“The world begins at a kitchen table…”), or a line from the
newspaper (“Coyote Found in Central Park”).
I also collect road signs and use them for exercises (Bear alert! or No Entry), and overheard conversations, (“She never got over it…..” Give your character something she never
got over.)
When I’m writing
fiction and get stuck I’ll take a one line idea for a scene or a character’s
name and write for five minutes without thinking. Sometimes I start out with
how stuck I am and woe is me, but this becomes boring after about forty seconds
and I get out of my own way and write something that surprises me, something I
didn’t know about the character or my story. And this is why five minute
exercises work; you get out of your own way, you don’t think, you forget about
perfection.
The exercises can
be both warm-ups and also side doors into what you want to write about. They
start you writing, whether you’re in the mood or not. Try timing yourself for
five minutes. Maybe you pick up your pen to write and panic suddenly seizes
you, your mind goes blank, there’s not one thought in your head. That’s fine.
Just write about how panic feels, how the clock is ticking, how awful it is
when you don’t have an idea.
Or say for
instance, you’re given the word turtle to
write about – and maybe you once actually had one of those tiny turtles that
live in a bowl and you start writing about it but immediately the critic on
your shoulder says, Who cares? Really,
who cares about this dumb turtle?
Well, the fact is that it’s not important if anyone cares about your
turtle story, you’re just writing it. Maybe you’ll get to the part about the
weird dank smell of turtles and the little scratchy sounds they make in the
bowl, or maybe not. Maybe you’ll write a truly boring five minute account of
this turtle you had as a kid. But who cares if it’s boring or not? It’s just an exercise, and lo and
behold you’re writing something. Writing something, anything, leads to writing what you really want and need to write
about.
Five minute
exercises can work for either fiction or memoir and essays. You can write the
truth, your own experiences, or you can make up stuff for your characters. Give
the turtle to one of them, have one tell you about her kitchen table, or have
one react to a bear alert sign as he drives down a country road. You don’t need
to know what you’re going to write to write it. Let yourself be surprised. Trust that you have a deep well
of feeling and thought and experience within you to draw from.
What interests me
as a teacher is how writing can be practiced by doing exercises. My long term writing students are rarely stuck
when given a prompt and since many of them are writing memoirs or novels, they find
a way to use the prompt for their work in progress. I once taught a workshop for people whose lives were
affected by cancer; they were writing as therapy with no interest in becoming
writers. They’d do rounds of five minute exercises on topics they were all
dealing with, and then read them aloud. A number of the workshop participants
stayed on for years and in spite of themselves became writers – they could take
a subject and write about it clearly with emotion and detail, and very often
what they wrote would make the rest of us cry or laugh out loud.
With five minutes
you don’t have time to plan or figure it out, or try to make it perfect, all
you can do is write. You can write a very short scene in five minutes, or you
can wander away from the prompt into a subject or memory that surprises
you. A lot can happen in five
minutes, or sometimes you just come up with ranting and whining. That’s
okay. It’s a small investment of
your time. It’s just an exercise; anything you can use from it is all gravy.
And the rest is just the literary equivalent of doing push-ups, making you a
stronger writer.
– Barbara Abercrombie 2013