While procrastinating, I came across something on the net that gave me this idea...
The object of the activity is to take the given random words, and write a story using them (or as many as you possibly can), at least a paragraph long. (But the longer the merrier.)
I'm giving two options for this activity. The first being a short list of random words, and the second being a paragraph of random words. With the paragraph, try to write something longer, and use as many of the words or ideas from the random paragraph as you can in your story.
The goal is to write something as amazingly rational, sane, deep, etc... as you possibly can, using these totally random and unrelated words. Eg, don't just put down any old thing, but try to actually make something decent with it. The better, deeper, more captivating or interesting your piece is, the better you did. Same for being able to use the harder/trickier words/sentence ideas.
The random words to start off with are:
particular, fragment, take, ice, island, thread, laughing
The random "paragraph" is:
Outside the concept beams the nameless oriental. The enough anniversary doles each sand underneath the stationary composite. The apathy consents underneath the storm! Can the imperative poetry starve? An addictive river suspects.
Your random character names are (if you want to be totally random):
Male: Benito
Female: Erin
Either: Macey, Sasha
These came from a random generator, so no complaints please.
As a footnote, I'll give you an example using one sentence. "A normal neighbor awaits another aided stereotype." & random name Erin.
Example: Erin put her arms around her mother's neck and so aided by her mother, was helped out of the van into her wheelchair. She grabbed her bag from the floor of the van, and put it on her lap, and then started wheeling herself toward the new house. Halfway up the front walk, she caught a glimpse of one of her normal neighbors staring at her over a tall hedge with pity. Erin continued on to the door, however, ignoring the stereotype. She knew that there was yet another person who didn't understand. Her life wasn't over just because she couldn't walk.
(6 words, 1 name used)
Gender:
Points: 890
Reviews: 5