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  • A Writing Exercise That Increases Awareness And Description Skills

    Practice attaching words to feelings requires time to do.
    Without a system that helps you monitor that time, the
    minutes or hours could feel unproductive. With the right
    exercise, you can then use that time wisely, as well as save
    you time and frustration.

    Learning to apply the right words to our six senses is a top
    ingredient to the mixture of writing. Its language brings
    the reader into the story. All of us easily know how we
    feel, or what we're seeing (okay, most of the time), what
    we're hearing, smelling, tasting, and sensing, and can
    usually explain it in 50 words if pushed to do it. But, how
    do you describe it in one or two words without the pushing?

    Also, by beginning with good material, the remaining part of
    the writing process becomes easier. This exercise will help
    you improve your beginning.

    This is a simple exercise that you can do anywhere, anytime,
    in a space of minutes or longer. You can practice Monday
    mornings in the garden, the doctor’s waiting room, or in the
    lunchroom. It can last as long as a television commercial
    (oops those aren't short any longer), or you more
    aggressively with a devoted 30-minutes a day. Whatever
    length of time or place you have, it will always improve
    your skill.

    You will want to sit while completing this exercise.

    Okay, let's start with the most difficult spot, your
    supplies -- paper and your writing instruments. Landscape,
    portrait, small, or regular size sheet of paper doesn't
    matter. I define what paper size to use by the amount of
    time available and my location. If I'm mobile, I use my
    small journal. If I'm at my desk or at home, I use a
    regular size paper. Sometimes lines, sometimes not.
    Sometimes the exercise flows over to two or three sheets.
    Don't limit the experience by paper size. Have fun with the
    recording tools as well. Experimentation is the key to our
    curiosity. And, curiosity is the foundation of a writer.

    Draw a circle on the page and place your name in the center.
    Large, small, in color, black, or blue, again it doesn't
    matter. Use whatever flips your pancakes at that moment.
    In other words, whatever feels good at the time.

    Your objective is to describe your five senses, six if you
    have that gift, with words. Write the words that express
    that sense in the space inside the circle randomly around
    your name.

    Here is how you would use this exercise to increase
    environment awareness and description. Write your words in
    the location on the paper relevant to the direction it
    appears. For example: I'm sitting outside my office on a
    9th floor balcony at the moment, I hear a heavy humming from
    the tires on the wet pavement below and birds chirping above
    me to the right. I would place the words for the tires on
    the bottom left and the chirping on the upper right on my
    page.

    Here are nine prompts to help you expand your experience.
    * Write words describing your atmosphere--the quality of
    air.
    * W


    What are the clouds doing? Can you see animals in their
    shapes?
    * The temperature of your location.
    * The source of light and its quality.
    * Where are people standing or sitting?
    * Shadows, are they're any? Where and how do they fall?
    * Predominant colors, wall colors, wallpaper, molding, chair
    railing, textured ceiling.
    * What do you smell? Using comparisons are a great way to
    relate to your reader. The air feels like just getting out
    of the fogged shower stall.
    * Are there other people around you? How do they smell,
    their clothes, their shoes? Guess at what they might do for
    a living. Are they dressed like someone on their way to
    work, doesn't work, a mom, dad, baker, or what?

    After you are comfortable describing your environment, spice
    the exercise up another notch. Compare your descriptive
    words to something else. For example: The room you are
    sitting in feels like a sauna with my clothes on.

    Continue spicing up the exercise to increase your awareness
    and descriptive powers--use people and objects. Since you
    are most familiar with yourself, begin there.

    After practicing on the most familiar subject, yourself,
    create a list of other familiar people in your life. Then
    sort the list from most familiar to least. Continue down
    the list. Somewhere during these lists and practice
    sessions, you will begin to feel comfortable with your
    skill.

    You can continue taking the exercise to another level. This
    time you are ready to expand your awareness and adaptation
    to words. Visit the local mall; sit in the food court for
    smorgasbord of new enriching thoughts-to-words experiences.

    Here are 11 prompts to help you expand your levels:
    * Describe what you are wearing.
    * How does your body feel?
    * What are your hands doing?
    * How does your throat feel?
    * How are you holding your mouth?
    * Eye movement
    * Breathing
    * How do you feel in general, in detail?
    * Name your mood. Does it have a flavor and color?
    * Describe your feelings with reference to music. A certain
    song or type of music.
    * How does your hair smell, clothes, the chair you're
    sitting on, the book you're reading?

    Be patient with yourself while practicing. This exercise
    isn't the easiest to complete, however, it is the most
    effective. Even if you aren't a writer, this exercise will
    help you triple your awareness skills in a short time
    period1. This exercise also helps police officers,
    speakers, judges, attorneys, or anyone else that uses their
    awareness skills to see and put it into words. This is also
    a NLP--neurolinguistics programming skill--for those aware
    of this process.





    About the author:

    Catherine Franz provides writing and marketing assistance to individuals who want to write and businesses that want to increase business. For more ideas and programs, visit The Abundance Center at: http://www.abundancecenter.com


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