"That's the way things come clear. All of a sudden. And then you realize how obvious they've been all along." - Madeleine L'Engle Mrs. L’Engle is my favorite author. She has a way of turning phrases, turning pages, and inspiring my deepest breaths. Her writing packs a punch, if you will. What writing do you remember? Why do you remember it? No matter what you write, use all those glorious tools in our writing tool boxes to create your best writing possible. I’ve provided a checklist, which will help you quite a bit, but I want to extend this thought to you: Make your writing memorable. How do you do this? One way to make writing interesting is to move up a level from the basic sentence. Re-think ideas and make them personal to you. **** How do we identify “basic sentences”? In my own writing adventures and self-editing, I have found some tricky words that make me stumble, stutter, and fall into lame sentence writing. Here is my list of Boring Words: It Is As That Are Were Was The Make your own list! What words do you use too much? What words do you use incorrectly? Sometimes these words are helpful. See right there? But I am aware that I used ‘are’ and know that possibly I could use something more effective. What is a more effective word than ‘are’? **** Question your writing. Each sentence offers possibility or boredom. **** Avoid cliché and instead create your own word pictures. Here is an example of a way to make your writing interesting: Example: Having my sister come for a visit was heaven on earth. Example: I like when my sister visits. Those sentences are okay and whatnot. Sure, they convey a basic idea. How can they be more interesting, detailed, intrinsic, and thought-provoking? Revised Example: Having my sister show up on my doorstep, one bright smile and hearty hug, greeting me with her unique flair and cinnamon scent brought tears to my eyes. Her presence was chocolate cupcakes. Her hug crammed the room full of sunlight. Her smile filled my soul with bubbly, pink sweater fuzzies. See how that helps you experience the sister? You would write this sentence completely different from me. How would you get to your version of this revised sentence? Start by re-thinking what is your ‘heaven on earth’? What makes you happy? If you are inclined to write, “I liked doing that,” instead explore the why and what behind what you were doing. What did ‘like’ feel like? Your ‘like’ is different than mine, and isn’t language the beautiful tool to explore how it compares? This is where imagery meets metaphor. This place is fun. This is one reason I love writing. Example 2: Have a good day! Revised Example 2: May your day be sunny, life-affirming, and lined with laughter! Example 3: The baby cried, looking so sad. There were no words to capture his wail. Revised Example 3: Shadows shimmied away from the wailing toddler, his bald head wrinkled red with frustration and hunger. Tears dripped in large droplets down his scrunched up cheeks, pooling with sighs and hopelessness in the gnarled blankets by his feet. Paci had disappeared. **** Give life to inanimate objects. If one object seems too difficult to explain, then illustrate objects or people’s reactions. Give an object personality. Is it warm? Soft? Cheerful? Threatening? Prideful? Scornful? Lonely? **** I hope you can take these ideas and carry them with you into all of your writing. Pack these ideas up, put them in your wallet, and take out as often as you need. Warning: Be careful, as this, if taken to heart, will change your communications forever. People will suddenly pay attention because you wrote or said something interesting. Be memorable. Use those gifts God has given you to communicate light, power, and passion to the darkness.
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