When facing a blank page, a blank canvas or simply… a blank and you need to produce something… anything… at this point, try the following “simple” exercise. It’s like a shot of caffeine to the creative brain.
1. Think of an object that is for sale in a store that you shop at frequently. Write the first object you thought of down on a page of paper.
2. Think of an adjective that begins with the first letter of the object you wrote down. Take the very first one you thought of and write that adjective down on the same page as the object.
3. Below the object and adjective, write 10 connections between the adjective and the object without repeating notions. After a few, it should get crazy hard. That’s what you want. Persevere! By the 4th or 5th connection, you should be in crazy land but get 10 and you expanded beyond normal thought. Now… admire your oddities and hit that blank page, blank canvas, or that… blank… and create something spectacular.
As an example, here is one I just did:
Object: Tennis racquet, Adjective: tight
Connections:
1. The strings on my tennis racquet are tight.
2. My muscles are tight after using my tennis racquet.
3. The shot I made with my tennis racquet was tight up against the base line.
4. My grip on my tennis racquet was tight.
5. The grip tape was wrapped tight around the handle of my tennis racquet.
6. When I looked through my tennis racquet I framed the view of my opponent in a tight oval.
7. I rolled the handle of my tennis racquet in my shirt which made my shirt tight on my chest.
8. When I removed the strings from my tennis racquet, the frame was a tight fit over my head.
9. I strum my tennis racquet like a guitar because the strings seem as tight as guitar strings and the handle is like a guitar neck.
10. I bought a cheaper tennis racquet because money was tight.
Whew. That was not easy but that is the whole point. There will likely be obvious connections between the object and the adjective because your mind defaults to a connection to think of the adjective off of the initial object. However, after exhausting a few connections, you start looking for alternate meanings of words and alternate situations to put those words to use. I hope you find this exercise useful.
Now go. Create. ~ The Mission Creative
