While you might not want to take the possible plots too seriously, you can get some ideas from it. Or if you don't, go with the plots and write it out in a short story. It gets you writing again, and that alone can often help with the fiend that is writers block.
SPELL. And use proper grammar. I know you can, because you used to before you came back. Unless you've been in some kind of brain-injuring accident, there's no excuse not to.
Second, read. Read a lot. Watch movies. Listen to music. Immerse yourself in a bunch of different types of media.
Or, look around you. Take events that happen during the day and embellish them. Make connections between two seemingly unrelated actions -- find cause and effect. Ask yourself "what if?"
And just write. It doesn't have to be good, but get your mind running. Drink some caffeine if you have to. Ramble. Get words on the page/screen. Use your imagination and write something ridiculous.
Story ideas? How about an electronic speaker that sits on the sidewalk all day preaching to people about the sins of audio-visual stimulation, because television is of the devil? Only auditory entertainment is valid.
How about an ancient scientist that invented a virus that made people grow a second eye? Because before that they were just cyclops.
How about a man trapped pitch-black room, except gradually, over time, the cube-shaped room morphs into a ball, and he finds that he can run in it like a hampster, but he doesn't know where he's going because he can't see, and so he's afraid he will run off the ends of the earth or into the ocean?
Vivi, try writing to express an idea or theme to the audience. A lot of writers write to simply express their views. For example, in "The Lovely Bones", one of the ideas the author expresses is family love, how lives change when a love one dies and what they do to try get their lives back on track.
"To the edge of the universe and back. Endure and survive."
Gwenevire wrote:Hah, I like your ideas I'll defiantly take them into consideration.
What exactly are you defiant against...?
My suggestion would be to sit down, look around, and write a short story, no matter how bad or plotless it may be, about the first interesting object you see. It will flow from there.
Dude, I thought you were a newbie when I saw your first post. You should hang out here more often. XD
Ubi caritas est vera, Deus ibi est.
"The mark of your ignorance is the depth of your belief in injustice and tragedy. What the caterpillar calls the end of the world, the Master calls the butterfly." ~ Richard Bach
Love is friendship that has caught fire. It is quiet understanding, mutual confidence, sharing and forgiving. It is loyalty through good and bad times. It settles for less than perfection and makes allowances for human weaknesses. — Ann Landers
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