In her book The Only Grammar Book You'll Ever Need, Susan Thurman discusses ways to generate ideas. I've listed two of her methods from pages136-137 here:
1. Freewriting is one of the most effective methods of cultivating ideas. Begin by writing your topic at the top of the page. Write anything related to your topic--words, phrases, or complete sentences, whatever scraps of thought come to mind. Give yourself a time limit of about ten munutes. Don't:
- Be comcerned with spelling or punctuation
- Go to the time or trouble of grouping your ideas
- Bother erasing anything
- Worry even if you digress from your topic
- Stop if you can't think of a specific word (just write ??? or XXX or some other shorthand)
You can repeat the process to expand on the ideas that you like. Since you're working in ten-minute sessions, the assignment may not seem as overwhelming as it first did.
2. Questioning is another method to help you develop ideas. Suppose you've been given a very general topic like "relate a terrible dining experience you once had." Begin by asking yourself variations of the reporter's fundamental six w and h questions (who? what? when? where? why? how?)
- Who was involved? (You and your date Pat)
- What started the "horrible" part of the evening? (You both became sick while still sitting at the table)
- When did this happen? (on a summer evening in 2001)
- Where did this happen? (at Sally's Scrumptious Shrimp Shack, in Seattle)
- Why did this happen? (you had eaten seafood that hadn't been cooked long enough)
- How did the evening end at the restaurant? (the manager gave you a complimentary dinner and a gift certificate to return another time)
Think about what interests you, what you're passionate about and start there. Good writers write what they know. If you can come up with at least ten post ideas for your idea, it's worth blogging about.
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