This short writing
exercise is based on one suggested by Margaret Geraghty in her excellent book –
The five-minute Writer, which we highly recommend.
Sometimes the hardest thing about being a writer is just
knuckling down and writing. And many writers live in fear of the dreaded blank
page.
Writing exercises can help get the juices flowing and will
also help hone your writing skills, preparing them for when you want to apply
them to short stories, novels, or whatever else it is you write.
Writing about rituals
Rituals are not just all about religion and festivals, we
all have all kinds of rituals in everyday life, many of which we’re probably
completely unaware of – until they become interrupted and we find ourselves
feeling unsettled or irritable.
When we read stories, the worlds and characters described on
the page are not built entirely by the words that are supplied by the author,
we use our life experience so far to fill out the details. If this didn’t
happen, then authors would need to write reams of words in order to build an
entire character or setting. As it is, they can use a few broad brushstrokes
and know that the reader will apply stereotypes and personal life experience to
fill in the rest.
We can use rituals to the same effect, by describing a
common ritual that somebody might be familiar with, such as morning ablutions
or making a first cup of coffee. It might be gathering all the things required
for a yoga class or a dog walk, or preparing for a short or long trip.
The way in which the character carries out a common ritual
will provide the reader with impressions of their character, as well as tone
and atmosphere of the scene.
For example:
Janice bounds out of bed and splashes refreshing ice cold
water on her face. She hums as she brushes her teeth and sweeps a bit of light
make-up on, before heading downstairs for a crunchy breakfast of muesli and
bananas with skimmed milk.
Nicole drags herself out of bed and swears at the
perpetually flickering bare bathroom light bulb that she still hasn’t got round
to fixing. She grimaces at herself in the mirror, squeezing spots of blood out
of her gums. There’s no time for breakfast, as usual, so she slams the door
behind her, stomach grumbling as she jogs down the road, not noticing the stain
on the leg of her jeans.
A short writing exercise about rituals:
Think about the rituals you do in your life – this can be
anything you do regularly, you don’t have to feel spiritual about it, or
particularly attached, it’s just something routine. It may have a calming
effect, but it may not. Write for fifteen minutes about your ritual.
Try to write with specific detail, but there’s no need to
over describe. For example, rather than saying ‘the dog lead’ say ‘the steel
choker chain’ but don’t write 500 words when 300 will do.
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