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For anyone watching right now that perhaps maybe they're writing sporadically or maybe
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they feel like they want to start getting back to the page, putting out a book, putting
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out an essay, starting to write a blog.
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If they want to do some type of creative writing exercise, what's a good prompt that you
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would give them to get started?
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Well, my favorite prompt is based on a book that was published a long ago by a writer
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named Joe Brainard, and the title is I Remember.
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The title of the book is I Remember.
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And in the book, every single sentence begins with the phrase “I remember.”
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And then drop down another sentence, “I remember.”
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And then another sentence, “I remember.”
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And when I give that exercise at retreats, I look out from where I'm sitting at a sea
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of people, and not one of them hesitates.
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Those are extremely evocative words.
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I mean, try not to finish a sentence that begins with “I remember.”
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And so what I suggest to people to do is to just begin -- have a special notebook, begin
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with the words “I remember” and write a sentence.
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Drop down a line, begin with -- not trying to connect memories.
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If you think about the way memory works, it doesn't work in a narrative line.
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It doesn't connect.
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We don't tell ourselves stories in our heads.
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We have these disparate memories that don't connect.
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And when we allow them to be associative and to bounce one off the next, it creates all
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sorts of interesting material.
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People almost invariably find memories that they didn't know that they had, or they make
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connections that they didn't know they had.
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So it's a good, it's a good springing of point.