free creative writing courseHello everyone. Whether you’re a CLL student or an online visitor, welcome to the first session of our free online creative writing course. Over the next eight sessions we will be looking at different aspects of creative writing and trying our hand at various forms. I’d strongly encourage you to have a go at the exercises along the way, and please feel free to leave comments or ask questions at the end. And now, without further ado…

Creativity and Art

What is creativity? The Collins dictionary defines it as ‘the ability to cause something to exist’. Without getting into too much of an existential discussion, I would say that with every thought that is expressed, something has been created. It was Descarte who said: ‘I think, therefore I am’; well I would add, ‘I think, therefore I create’ (do you feel a God complex coming on?). But how do we express our thoughts? Sometimes we do it verbally, other times by body language and still again through what is loosely termed ‘art’.

Art takes place when a thought is expressed and fixed in a way that other people may experience it on an aesthetic level – through music, writing, painting, sculpture, choreography and so on. Many artists say that their best work takes place when they ‘by-pass’ the thought and simply express the feeling. This may be true, but for writers, who use a verbal medium, a feeling must first be converted into a thought before it can be put into words. Don’t over analyse the thought before you express it, as this way you can ‘channel’ the purest interpretation of the feeling, but some cognitive process needs to take place. Some writers prefer to mull over a thought and give it form before they put pen to paper – I’m one of them – but it’s good practice to try and switch off the ‘editor’ at least for the first draft. First response trigger exercises are useful in this regard and can release some unexpected words and images.

Exercise 1:
Write down your first response to these words or phrases:

  • Blue ball
  • And that’s when the sadness came
  • Coffee

The first task of a good writer is to convert feelings into thoughts and then into words. This is the raw material that can then be converted into something more permanent. Some writers refuse to toy with their first drafts, believing their creativity will be diluted; I disagree. Allowing your critical mind to improve a piece of writing is where the craftsman meets the artist. Something produced only by the former will lack soul and something by the latter will lack form. Good writing is a combination of art and craft.

For public consumption

Art, of course, is highly subjective and one woman’s masterpiece is another woman’s unmade bed. We all have the ability to create, but whether or not our creation is ‘art’ must be left to the eye or ear of the beholder.

In this session we will look at how you can craft those creative thoughts into creative writing to share with other people. And that’s what sets ‘public’ writing apart from ‘private’ scribblings – there’s a perceived readership in mind. When I ramble on in my journal, I am the only one who will read it (hopefully!) so my only concern is getting my thoughts down on paper. The moment I want someone else to read it I begin to consider ways to improve the presentation and craft it into something more aesthetically pleasing. I consider which words may sound more colourful, whether or not my sentence structure is grammatically correct, whether I’m using evocative imagery, and so on.

Story, feeling or image?

What is it about those creative thoughts that you think might be of interest to other people? Do they speak of an eternal truth or a common experience? Do they make you laugh or cry? Do they suggest a story that will entertain or a poem that captures a moment that must be shared?

Exercise 2: In 50 words or less write down why you want to write then list three creative thoughts that you’ve had lately (each 10 words or less). These may be an image, a musing, a ‘truth’, a story, or so on. If you haven’t had any, take yourself for a walk and look around; what grabs your imagination? Browse through a newspaper or a magazine; do any stories or pictures catch your attention? Think back over your day; did anything funny, charming, shocking or unusual happen to you or someone you know?

Poetry or prose?

Some people are more suited to writing poetry than prose and some people do well at both. Although we won’t be discussing it in this course, other people are more suited to script. I’m one of them. I’ve had relative success as a prose writer and in fact have managed to earn a living from it, but it’s taken years of hard work to get to this point. I recently branched out into scriptwriting and found that I had much more of a natural ability. (If you’re interested in finding out more about scriptwriting, check out getting started in playwrighting). You may find that you’ve been trying to make it as a poet when actually you’re more suited to prose. Now I don’t want to pigeonhole anyone, but ask yourself the following questions:

  • Are you more attracted to films than stills?
  • Do you enjoy telling people ’stories’ from your life?
  • Do you prefer to read stories or poems?

If yes, to these, then you may be more suited to prose than poetry. If no, then the opposite may be true. If it’s ’sometimes yes, sometimes no’ then perhaps you are suited to both. We shall be looking at how to write poems in more detail in session 7, but suffice to say, a poem is like a snapshot of a moment. If you can’t rest until you know what happened before and after, then prose may be your genre.

Exercise 3: Take one of the three creative thoughts you wrote down in Exercise 2, then list 20 separate words that communicate or describe that thought. Do not, at this stage, link the words into sentences. Once you have your 20 words use them in a poem of 16 lines or less. Then, take the same 20 words and work them into a short story of under 300 words. Which exercise came more easily? Which form has best communicted your creative thought?

Further Resources:

the-creative-writing-coursebook
There are some excellent resources out there for creative writers. To get quick ’starter’ images when your own well is dry I recommend The Writer’s Block by Jason Rekulak. I’m currently working through The Creative Writing Coursebook by Julia Bell and Paul Magrs and finding it very useful.

The next creative writing course session is how to write a short story. But before you move on to that, please feel free to leave a comment or ask a question in the box below.

436 Responses to “Releasing your Creativity”

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  1. 380
    Katy Says:

    Dear Fiona, first of all I would like to thank you for all the hard work you have put into this online course for all of us to be able to learn so much from. I am very interested in everything you have explained to us so far, and am at present doing the exercises re The Blue Ball, the Sadness, and the Coffee etc, which I enjoyed immensely, but found to my surprise that my creativity and imagination began to come out in leaps and bounds, making each of the three subjects into much more than just a few words. i.e.
    1. I saw children playing happily with a large `blue ball` on the beach in the breeze, completely oblivious to the fact that a few minutes earlier their lovely `blue ball` had been just a little bundle of thin inflatable rubber, awaiting only to be blown up and the air retained therein by just a little plastic stopper to create their wonderful object of pastime.
    2. The sadness came when I looked at my darling lifeless mother on the lounge carpet where I discovered her, having passed, with sign or warning, her last breath, and feeling the very soon awaited new baby withing myself, `and the sadness came` when I realised that this wonderful and caring mother who had always been and who now no longer was, would never herself have the joy of seeing and holding her first grandchild from the daughter whom she herself loved so much, and
    3. I wrote about the bronzed Brazilians working in the heat of the sun in the isles of the coffee plantations, never complaining, their sparkling white teeth showing so clearly as they smiled and chatted as they worked, and I became aware that both due to, and thanks to, their hard work and perseverance in the gruelling and underpaid lifestyle they probably were accustomed to I, myself, had the luxury of quietly being able to sit and read my morning paper, savouring with relish and taking utterly for granted the aroma and taste of my “wake-up” call of each morning – my `life saving` first of the day `cup of coffee`.
    There, I said my imagination had run away with me, and am not sure if this is a good sign or a bad sign. Do you have any ideas or comments? Thank you so much again Fiona, and now on to the rest of the First Chapter exercies, which I am really looking forward to. With warmest regards, Katy

  2. 379
    Fiona Veitch Smith Says:

    Write as much as you like Satinka. This is for you. It’s simply an exercise to release your creativity. I don’t look at it.

    Happy writing!

    Fiona

  3. 378
    Satinka Says:

    Thank you, I am having fun and hope with your course!
    I am not sure if you meant to write a whole paragraph or just write first few lines that come to the mind?
    I wrote online few lines but I would like to know if you expect to write as longer as possible?What would be convenient?

    Blue ball rhythmically swinging between puffy white clouds

    thats when the sadness came stalking the whole of my body, slowing down my steps
    grabbing my legs, paralysing my body, bringing me closer to death..

    Coffee ..
    vibrant fumes of Rumba and Mambo..

    Thank you,
    S.

  4. 377
    Sobhanakumary Says:

    I was thinking hard to write something about a ‘ blue ball’ , when my seven year old grand daughter brought a globe from school. She told me that she wanted to be a glob-trotter. I am sad that I dont have much time left to be one, and what else i can do other than muse on it over a cup of coffee!

  5. 376
    Fiona Veitch Smith Says:

    Why isn’t that creative? All of those things could be the start of something. Simplicity is not a lack of creativity. You’re doing yourself in before you even start. Give yourself a good talking to!

  6. 375
    deathmajestic Says:

    I fear I’m not very creative. My blue ball was a blue medecine ball; my coffee was a cup of Folgers classic; and my sadness was a scene from the book “A Picture of Dorian Gray”. My three crative thoughts were all ones I had a while ago and probably weren’t original even then. They were “A woman named Evangeline is the angel of death”, the name “Ellia”, and the line “My tears will be your river crossing.”

  7. 374
    Fiona Veitch Smith Says:

    Hello Kathie, there’s no right and wrong. This was simply an exercise to release something in you. If a sentence was released, that’s great, but if it led to something longer, that’s fine too. Happy writing!

  8. 373
    Fiona Veitch Smith Says:

    Hello Deborah. Glad you’re enjoying the course. Regarding critiquing rates, it varies according to what you want done. There is a link to my rates on the FAQ page. But if you missed it, here it is again http://www.thecraftywriter.com/services/#critiquing

  9. 372
    Kathie Says:

    Thank you for the exercises. I wrote about a busy mother who drank black coffee because her four year old son had woke her up after a four night sleep. The boy tripped with the big blue ball and fell down the stairs. His mother took him to the hospital and when they asked her for her health care plan the sadness came to her. It was interesting. But I wasn’t sure if I understood the exercise because I was unclear. Did I have to create some small narrative or just write three sentences, I wasn’t sure. It took some time to do. But thanks, I really enjoyed it. Can’t wait to keep up writing.

  10. 371
    Deborah Says:

    Hi Fiona,

    I want to thank you for allowing us to draw from your experience and wisdom.The exercises are great and looking forward to the rest of the course.
    I would like to know what your fee is for professional critiquing. I did not see an amount under F.A.Q. If you could let me know I would appreciate it.
    Thank you for making this short course free and I know everyone else is just as grateful as I am.
    Deborah

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