Writing Challenges for The New Year

Considering a writing challenge to inspire you for the new year?  Perhaps one of these will be just the thing.

A River of Stones


Fiona Robyn, who began this micro-poetry movement, describes a small stone as "a very short piece of writing that precisely captures a fully-engaged moment."  She encourages others to join her in writing a stone a day through January. Need more encouragement?  She offers a lovely ebook at no cost: How To Write Your Way Home. This is truly one of those inspired projects destined to grow.

As a side note:  I learned about River of Stones from Anne Stormont when she participated in 2011.  She is currently writing stones for advent and her descriptions are so beautiful. The River of Stones had slipped my mind in the past year but, because of Anne, I'm seriously considering participating in January.

100 Themes Challenge


The history of The 100 Themes Challenge is well-documented here.  It became really big when Deviant Art became involved.  Basically, it's a list of themes (Introduction, Love, Light, Dark. . .) that serves as a jumping off point for artists.  I first heard of the challenge in the contexts of writing and photography, but you can apply the list to any creative endeavor.  To share your work, get involved with a community of others working on the same challenge. I know there are groups on DeviantArt.com, Fanfiction.net, and LiveJournal and I'm sure there are many more.

FridayFlash


This is a fantastic way to share short fiction in a supportive community. Although you don't have to write a story every week, many of the authors do.

Here's the brief description: "Friday Flash is an Internet meme designed to increase your visibility as a fiction writer. The idea is simple enough. Write a piece of flash fiction, defined as 1000 words or less, post it to your blog, and then on Friday announce it to the world via Twitter or some other social network along with the link to your post. If you use Twitter be sure to include the hashtag, #fridayflash."  Find out more on the #fridayflash website:  http://fridayflash.org/press/about-fridayflash/

Flickr 365

You might consider joining any one of the Flickr 365 groups.  The idea?  You choose a theme. You take a photo every day.  The big one, Project 365, has nearly 25,000 members, but there are lots and lots of smaller groups (many of which still number in the hundreds).  Some photographers focus on self-portraiture.  Some focus on their kids.  Some are a bit more obscure.  One of my favorites is bench standing. (There are multiple groups devoted to this:  Bench Monday, Happy Original Bench, Bench Anyday, Bench Monday (Anything Benchlike), and for those not inclined to limit themselves to benches, we have Standing On Stuff.)  If you can imagine it, there very well may be a group devoted to it.

The point?  Creativity.  By looking at the same subject or theme on a daily basis, you begin to stretch.  It's a gorgeous idea.

Make Something 365

Brought to you by Noah Scalin who made a skull a day for a year, the Make Something 365 website encourages you to pick your own subject and go with it.  One of my favorites is Librarian's Daughter.

Comments

  1. Writing Challenges for The New Year: http://t.co/jkdeBjek #amwriting

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  2. Thanks for sharing these challenges! I will totally check them out. Hope you have a very productive and happy New Year.

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  3. New today from my Friend @johannaHarness "Small Stones" love it. http://t.co/aCmWLQO3

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  4. Ooh! Johanna, I'll be participating in A River of Stones! My co-blogger and I did it last January (and in a more typically half-assed way last July... ;-) ) and had a fantastic experience. (It was very cool to be doing both that and Wading In at the same time--talk about creative movement.) I do hope you decide to join up! xo

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  5. Thank you. I hope you have a great year too!

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  6. Oooh! I love when our paths overlap. Wonderful!

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