How to Get Inspiration for Your Writing

How to Get Inspiration for Your Writing | TSC Blog Banner

Writing is not a task but a journey where we express or record our thoughts, facts, fiction, or feelings. It is a skill that gets better with time- the more we practice, the better or perfect we get at writing.

But when we start writing professionally, at times- we find the writing monotonous and lose our creative angle as ideas dry. We also miss the passion for writing when the writing topic is not so interesting. So, put in your efforts, continue your passion for writing, sustain creativity, and increase your expertise in writing.

Tips to Find Inspiration for Everyday Writing

Explore the Surroundings for Inspiration

Explore and observe the surroundings to get inspiration or an idea for your writing or story. Scott Adams, known for his cartoon strip Dilbert, used his real-life experiences from his job as his inspiration for his cartoon strips. 

Even a monotonous 9 to 5 job can give you an idea or inspiration to write something interesting about it. There are infinite stimuli from our history, books, traveling experience, observing people, and even dreams that catch our eye to wonder and give us an idea.

Practice Free-Writing

Free writing is a time-tested pre-writing technique that allows us to unlock our creativity and fluency in writing. If you are writing for the first time and have no idea how to initiate, then start writing following your thoughts and whatever comes to your mind. 

Practice free writing with a time limit that improves your word flow and loosens your creativity. 

Often, by reviewing or editing free-style write-ups and accessing our unconscious mind, we get suggestions from the conscious mind with different ideas to form a new story.

A Shift from Goal Setting to Habit Formation

Habit trumps Goals, as goals inspire us with an endpoint, and habit helps weave inspiration into our core and form continuity. The most prolific writers are not goal-oriented but write daily to maintain continuity.

Goals come with the pressure of expectation and do not work, but habits help us put ourselves in a position of continual inspiration. Therefore, instead of saying, “I want to finish my script,” say, – “I want to write 20 minutes every day.”

Read to Devour People’s Brain

It is imperative to be a great reader to become a great writer. Reading the work of others helps stimulate our minds and boost creativity and concentration. 

We discover a new world of fascinating ideas and experiences through reading. It gives us an idea of how a writer pulls a trick and weaves a story. We can make odd connections between ideas, open up our creative skills, and create unique stories. 

Craft Your Unique Writing Style

We should craft our unique writing style and focus on becoming the best writer we can be. Often comparing ourselves with the best authors like Hemingway or Plath discourages our writing. 

Following our writing style and challenging yourself to be creative in a new way may lead you to be the next great author.  

Turn Trials into Triumph

Believing in yourself can help you turn trials into triumphs. We fail when we start avoiding difficulty and hope in ourselves. When your writing gets rejected, or your blog post falls flat on its face, get inspired to write ten times better the next time and prove to everyone you can do it.

Get Inspired to Write and Become Inspiration for Others

Get Inspired to Write and Become Inspiration | TSC Blog Inner Creative

Find inspiration from your surroundings and yourself, your deep love to write, and pave the way to success. Believe in yourself when you feel stuck, and choose the right and creative way to continue your writing. The Story Cabinet (TSC) brings the writer’s community together on a common platform. TSC encourages young writers to share their stories or experiences through the dedicated Writer’s section.

About TSC

The Story Cabinet (TSC) is a phone-based short story platform – marrying the versatility of smartphones to make it a tool for creating, sharing, and discovering stories & human experiences.

© 2024 The Story Cabinet         Privacy Policy | Terms & Conditions