Hey, everyone! Hope you’re doing well and this winter is treating you kindly. Just thought I’d hop on here and make a quick post about something that has been on my mind recently…
We’ve talked to AI a bit on this blog. We’ve mostly stayed away from the environmental impact (that gets a little too complicated for me) and have mostly just discussed the concerns with the increase of AI “slop” that is flooding the writing world. AI books are now prevalent on Amazon and are overshadowing real writers in an already oversaturated market, where it’s challenging to make any money, let alone earn a living. It’s concerning, you all know it.
But another concern on the horizon is its impact on your brain and creativity. In short, it is making us mentally LAZY. Can you imagine that? Science shows that creativity (or more accurately, our brains) arer muscle that needs to be worked out periodically in order to stay sharp. What do you think happens to this muscle when the only writing you do is typing in a badly worded prompt into chat gpt?
AI is becoming a crutch for modern writers. Whether you believe the statement that “AI is destroying the environment” or you’re more open-minded to the robots taking over (A smarter grammarly would be nice…), this effect shouldn’t be ignored or pushed aside. This is a very real concern that doesn’t have to be overly political in any sense. Our brains can get lazy. If we don’t use them enough, they turn to mush. Simple.
So what’s the alternative then? In short, your brain, but that wouldn’t make for a very short blog post if I just stopped at that. I’ve compiled a list below of various ways you can come up with your own ideas organically, without involving the use of any chatbot. Protect your brain, dear writer! It’s your greatest resource. Use it.
1. The Word Jar Method
Write nouns, verbs, adjectives, settings, emotions, and random objects on slips of paper. Toss them in a jar (or several jars, if you’re feeling Type A). Pull 3–5 at random and make it work.
Example pull: porch swing, jealousy, February, apology, river.
Your brain now has a job. Let it complain and then get to work.
2. The Frankenprompt
Create columns on a page:
- Character archetypes
- Locations
- Conflicts
- Objects
- Constraints (must take place at night, must include a lie, must end unresolved)
Close your eyes, point at one from each column, and stitch them together. No optimizing. No rerolling until it’s “good.”
3. Alphabet Abuse
Pick a random letter and force yourself to generate:
- 10 nouns
- 10 verbs
- 10 adjectives
All starting with that letter.
Then write something using at least five of them. This is shockingly effective and slightly infuriating, which means it’s working.
4. The Bad Idea Generator
Set a timer for five minutes and intentionally come up with the worst possible story ideas. Lean into cliché. Lean into melodrama. Lean into nonsense.
Then circle one thing in the list that secretly has potential. That’s usually where the gold is hiding.
5. Sentence Autopsy
Open a book you love. Pick one random sentence.
Now:
- Rewrite it in a different genre
- Rewrite it from another POV
- Rewrite it with the emotional tone flipped
You’re not stealing. You’re studying how sentences breathe.
6. The Overheard Thought Exercise
Write down fragments of thoughts you have throughout the day. Not polished ideas. Just scraps. String them together into a coherent tale.
7. Constraint Dice
Assign constraints to numbers (you can use real dice, a random number generator, or scraps of paper).
Examples:
- POV
- Time period
- Emotional tone
- Length limit
- One forbidden word
Roll and obey. Creativity thrives when it’s boxed in.
8. The Mundane Remix
Take an ordinary task (making coffee, folding laundry, driving to work) and write about it as if it’s:
- Sacred
- Sinister
- Mythic
- Absurd
This trains your brain to reframe, which is one of the most valuable creative skills there is.
9. Sensory Isolation Prompts
Write a scene where you remove one sense entirely.
- No sight
- No sound
- No touch
Your brain has to compensate, and in doing so, it stretches. Conversely, you can write a story only employing the use of a SINGLE sense.
10. The Question Pile
Instead of prompts, write questions.
- What does this character want but refuse to admit?
- What would ruin this ending?
- What’s the most inconvenient truth here?
Questions keep your brain engaged longer than answers ever will.
11. Use a generator Website
Springhole.net, fantasy name generator.com, etc. They don’t use AI, they just randomly jumble stuff up. Nothing complicated. OR you can visit my generators tab on this very blog. 😉
Ok, rapid fire round…
- Tarot Pull Prompt
Pull one card for character, one for conflict, one for outcome. Ignore the “official” meanings if you want. Let the imagery do the heavy lifting. - Pinterest Roulette
Search one vague word like “world,” “winter,” “kitchen,” or “blue.” Use the first image that appears as your setting. No scrolling. No refining. - Bookstore Spine Stare
Stand in front of a shelf, read titles only, and mash two together into a new premise. Bonus points if they absolutely shouldn’t coexist. - Dictionary Dare
Open a dictionary to a random page. First word is the theme. Second word is the tone. Third word must appear verbatim in the piece. - Song Title Alchemy
Shuffle a playlist, pause randomly, and use the song title as your opening line or emotional arc. Do not listen to the song fully. Fill in the blanks where you lack knowledge. - Weather Report Writing
Write a scene that emotionally mirrors today’s weather. Not literally. Vibes only. - Object With a Past
Pick up the nearest object and write its backstory like it has lived three different lives before you. - First Line Theft (Ethically)
Take the first line of a public-domain book and write a completely unrelated story from it. - Constraint Countdown
Give yourself ten minutes, 250 words, and one absolute rule (no adjectives, no dialogue, no first person). Stop when the timer ends. - Google Autocomplete Confessional
Start typing “why do I” or “I’m afraid of” into Google and use the suggestions as poem or essay titles.








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