Showing posts with label Writing Tips Wednesdays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writing Tips Wednesdays. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Gaming The Mind to Write


 

Writers will tell you that switching from the kinetic real world to the unchatered blank page can cause a paralyzing shock. I find playing an electronic game heats up my word making and paragraph baking skills. A word game helps to focus on the writing task at hand, but other games that require focus on a smaller than life object also help. Games flip the cone of concentration from outward reality to the inward creative potential.

A great place to find unique games that you can play in the isolation of your writing environment can be purchased online from stores such as Hammacher Schlemmer, Brookstone, and Lord and Taylor. Standard games and gadgets are found at Kohls, Office Depot, and J.C. Penny's.

Two stores that are worth venturing into the real world to shop, especially around the holidays, are Macy's and Neiman Marcus. Macy's stores are alive with magic on every floor. Larger than life nutcracker soldiers and huge ornaments like ruby planets greet you at every landing. Golden garlands arch across the ceilings and there are often Christmas-themed performances. The window displays at Macy's offer up scenes that enchant even the most worried writer into concocting sugar plum sweet pages. Neiman Marcus transports the holiday shopper to the sky with their atrium soaring Christmas trees and upscale, diamond-studded, holiday window exhibits.

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

3 Reasons You Need a Writing Coach


Have you ever thought about getting a writing coach? A writing coach is a person who can help you find your place in the writing world and coach you toward becoming your best writing self. A coach acts similarly to a critique group, but with more purpose. Depending on how involved you and your coach are, using one can dramatically increase your chances of getting published.

Here are three reasons why you might want to find a writing coach:

A Writing Coach Can Show You the Ropes

Your writing coach should be a person who is already published, ideally in a similar genre/field as you want to be in. The writing coach can help share the process she went through toward getting published in that industry. She will share tips about what editors are looking for, inconsistencies in your writing, trends in the industry, and much more.

A Writing Coach Can Help You Improve

You probably don’t think your work is the best thing ever, but sometimes an outside prospective is exactly what you need to get past any blocks in your writing. A third party can see issues with your writing and stories that you cannot and help you find a better way to say what you are trying to say. Some coaches may even help edit your work, depending on how much you are willing to pay them.

A Writing Coach Can Help Get Your Work in Front of the Right People

A person who has been published is an invaluable resource. This person knows how to get something published and who needs to see your work before it can start its way onto the publishing process. A writing coach can help you find an agent, publisher, editor, and even a PR team, when you are finally able to become published.


If you plan on becoming a published writer one day, a writing coach will be your best friend.
Brenda is a fellow book-lover and coffee-addict. She is a freelance writer, punctuation nerd, and grammar enthusiast. Her favorite book genres are Science Fiction, Fantasy with a Twist, and Dystopian. Brenda blogs about books, writing and more at Daily Mayo. Find her here on CaW for Writing Tips Wednesdays the first Wednesday of every month.

Follow Brenda on Facebook and Twitter or subscribe to updates from Daily Mayo to keep up with all the exciting things in her life; ranging from drinking coffee to get through the day to drinking coffee just for fun.

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

3 Easy Tips for Filling a Writing Rut


Writers must create copy in varying styles even if they only work in one industry or genre. For example, an author not only has to write the fictional content for her book, but she may also need to create promotional materials, have her own author blog, and write to connect with fans.

If you find everything you write sounds boring and the same, you may be in a writing rut. Use these three tips to get out fast.

Personalize It

Bland copy is boring copy. Add in funny phrasings or personal stories to make things more interesting. Most writing is meant to entertain. Be flexible and have fun with your writing. Even a subject as dry as car repair can be a little more interesting if you tell the story of how you accidentally wired the car to honk every time the windshield wipers were turned on. However, unless you are writing pure fiction, don’t make the stories up. Be the person you really are. This is why all my stories revolve around books and science journals that I read online.

Write the Opposite

I like to refresh my writing palate by writing something completely different. If I had any musical talent, I might take this even further by trying to write a song instead of a different kind of writing, but things are what they are.

If you are writing a non-fiction piece, write something fiction just for fun. If you are writing fiction, try writing a personal essay. Or, if you have the talent, try creating something completely different, like art or a song. Writing is an art, too, and you may be surprised how much your writing changes and evolves for the better after you do something completely different.

Write Something Just for Fun

Everyone who is an aspiring/career writer probably got into it because they loved it. I found myself in a freelance writing career because I originally wanted to write books. However, deadlines and career responsibilities pulls the fun out of it sometimes.

Mix things up by writing something just for fun. You may never use that piece anywhere, but no-pressure writing can be an amazing thing. This is something I’m going to try myself soon, as I got completely burned out by fiction writing when I participated in NaNoWriMo in 2013.

Have you ever been stuck in a writing rut?
Find 5 more ways to get out of a writing rut here!

Brenda is a fellow book-lover and coffee-addict. She is a freelance writer, punctuation nerd, and grammar enthusiast. Her favorite book genres are Science Fiction, Fantasy with a Twist, and Dystopian. Brenda blogs about books, writing and more at Daily Mayo. Find her here on CaW for Writing Tips Wednesdays the first Wednesday of every month.

Follow Brenda on Facebook and Twitter or subscribe to updates from Daily Mayo to keep up with all the exciting things in her life; ranging from drinking coffee to get through the day to drinking coffee just for fun.

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

3 Free Courses that Will Help You Become a Better Writer


Everyone wants to learn how to be a better writer. Even if you don't want to write books one day, we all have to write in everyday life with e-mails, business letters, legal issues, and more. Knowing how to write is an invaluable skill. 

If you don't have a lot of money to invest in writing training, you may feel like you have no options to become a better writer. 

Luckily, these three online writing courses are completely free and can help you learn to write better today!

Technical Writing from Open Courseware

Technical writing is something everyone has to do no matter whether you sell houses, fight fires, or are an author. This specific course outlines helpful tips through video lessons on content creation, resume building, e-mails, concise copy, and more.


Introduction to Writing for Children from Falmouth University

This course is completed with two video courses outlining tips for writing for children. Writing for children is a little different than writing for adults, and any writer interested in writing for children should check out this free online writing course.

Take the course:

Write What You Know from the Writing University

The Writing University offers practical and helpful podcasts on a variety of writing techniques. All lessons are useful, but this lesson talking about how you can “write what you know” without limiting yourself is particularly helpful to new and old writers alike.

With a little practice and training, both the most novice of writers and the most veteran writer can improve their skills. Writing, just like many skills, is just something that improves with practice and time!

Where do you go to become a better writer? What are your favorite courses? 

Find 10 more resources for free online writing courses here!

Brenda is a fellow book-lover and coffee-addict. She is a freelance writer, punctuation nerd, and grammar enthusiast. Her favorite book genres are Science Fiction, Fantasy with a Twist, and Dystopian. Brenda blogs about books, writing and more at Daily Mayo. Find her here on CaW for Writing Tips Wednesdays the first Wednesday of every month.

Follow Brenda on Facebook and Twitter or subscribe to updates from Daily Mayo to keep up with all the exciting things in her life; ranging from drinking coffee to get through the day to drinking coffee just for fun.

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

3 Reasons Why Your Editor Should Be Your Best Friend


A lot of writers feel wary of editors and editing. These writers are afraid that using an editor will remove their voice and meaning from the story and transform it into something else entirely.

Although there are plenty of bad editors out there, an editor is not something to fear and feedback on writing will usually only make it better. Here are three reasons why using an editor can improve your writing.

Editors Provide Balance

If you think about writing like the Force from Star Wars, editors are the Jedi of writing. Their job is to provide balance to any story to make sure that evil and good don’t take up too much room in the story. Editors offer the right balance between plot, descriptions, narrative, dialogue, and every other element of a story or other piece of writing to create a balanced, entertaining piece that presents the story in the best way possible. Adding in enough “bad” elements can prevent a story from feeling too sappy and fake. Conversely, not enough “good” can make a story feel bleak. Editors help all writers find that balance.

Editors Refuse Sub-Par Writing

Lazy writing is easy. Good writing is hard. Most writers start with lazy writing. The words are a rough draft on the page. The editor’s job is to find the weak points of any story (with plot and with writing style) and tweak it until it is precise and offers the best version of the story. No one would want to read any of To Kill a Mockingbird if it sounded like a third-grader wrote it.

Editors Push Limits

A good editor is designed to help writers reach their maximum potential. Similar to how editors don’t allow lazy writing; an editor will help a writer find their best writing limits. Maybe you don’t think you can write as well as bestselling author Famous One, but with a little direction and pushing, maybe you can write something just as good. Editors search for perfection and find it in you.

No matter what industry you are in, editing is one of the most important parts of the writing process. You can do some of your own editing, but the benefit of using an outside source (and preferably a professional editor) is invaluable and will make the end result that much better.

Do you use an editor? Why or why not?



Brenda is a fellow book-lover and coffee-addict. She is a freelance writer, punctuation nerd, and grammar enthusiast. Her favorite book genres are Science Fiction, Fantasy with a Twist, and Dystopian. Brenda blogs about books, writing and more at Daily Mayo. Find her here on CaW for Writing Tips Wednesdays the first Wednesday of every month.

Follow Brenda on Facebook and Twitter or join the Daily Mayo Book Lover's Club to keep up with all the exciting things in her life; ranging from drinking coffee to get through the day to drinking coffee just for fun.