How I practice
I saw a post once about how young artists get told to “practice” but nobody ever tells them how. Like, what exactly are you practicing? The same is true for writers. People will tell you you just gotta “write a lot,” but if you’re unhappy with your writing and you don’t know why, how will that help?
So: what does a writer’s training regimen look like? I will tell you mine. I’ve tried a lot, but the techniques I come back to again and again are:
During my writing session, I write fast and loosely for at least ten minutes. I wouldn’t call this freewriting, exactly. I’ll work on an actual scene, but rather than thinking thoughts and then writing them down, I think aloud on the page. It’s the same as normal writing except where I’d normally say “no, that’s not the right word, try another one,” I just...don’t. I write the wrong word, and then I write maybe twenty more before I get one I like. I let myself make big, weird gestures I would normally discard - odd turns of phrase, nonsensical metaphors and images, slang that isn’t really appropriate, grammatically bizarre sentences, etc. It’s like those vocal warmups where you make silly sounds to access the full range of your vocal apparatus. I find it meditative, in a way. It’s like going into a little trance.
On the opposite end of the spectrum: I read other stories, figure out how they do something I like, and then imitate it. Maybe I like the particular way a writer knits together a character’s inner reflections and external perceptions in the narration. I take a paragraph of theirs, analyze how exactly they’re doing it, and then try to do something similar in a paragraph of mine.
I don’t do these exercises all the time. The rest of the time I just write the way I’ve always written. But these two exercises affect how I write even when I’m not doing them.
















