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Writer and instructor Debra Thornley brings you writing ideas, inspiration, tips and information
Tag: letter
by Debra Thornley on Nov.01, 2009, under Something to Think About, The Writing Life, life, writing prompts
Write A Letter For Old Time’s Sake

Writing A Letter the old fashioned way can help release writers block
I have a confession to make. I have been fighting writers block for quite awhile now. When I sit down to write, it feels as if my fingers are no longer attached to my hand, they just type on their own. It has felt as if there are no feelings or thoughts flowing from my brain and down through my fingers and onto the keyboard. So early last week, as I was typing an email to a friend, I suddenly thought about how much typing has dominated my life. I suddenly felt a longing for my childhood days when I was writing a letter to a pen-pal in Yugoslavia, or to my brother’s friend who was serving in Viet Nam. I thought about the airmail stamp, of licking it and putting it on the airmail envelope then dropping the letter into the mailbox. And then I thought about the the time I wrote a story in the sixth grade when I felt proud of my penmanship, and my wild imagination that took me to the planet X where I flew an X-15 rocket around the planet to the far side and saved the planet from destruction. My inspiration back then was a brand new television show called Star Trek, and another show in which the Robinson Family continued to be “Lost in Space.”
So as I finished typing the email to my friend and clicked send, I vowed it would be my last personal email for one week. For me, typing a letter has become a detachment from everything that is important to me. In that moment I suddenly longed for the act of writing. For my own sanity, I needed to get back to basics. I needed to hold a pen in my hand, put it to paper and form the letters that make the words to convey my feelings and thoughts to the recipient of my letter.
I posted my intentions to my wall on facebook. I made a declaration that for one week, my response to everyone who sends me personal emails will be a hand written letter from me. “Yes, it will take longer”, I stated, “but I need to get in touch with my writer self again.” I also requested they also include their mailing address, just to make sure I had the updated information.
Five of my friends responded to my post, sounding rather excited about receiving something in the mail that wasn’t a bill. When I sat down to write the first letter, I thought, “Why not encourage others to hand-write a letter as well?” So I did. In each letter I wrote, I included a blank stamped envelope on which I put their name and address in the return address corner. I asked them, in the letter, to use that envelope to hand-write a letter to someone they care about and include a blank stamped envelope in their letter, asking their friend to do the same thing. My dream is to get the whole country to hand-write one short letter. The cost is one stamp, two envelopes, and the paper on which to write their letter. (No, I don’t work for the post office.)
After this one week of hand-writing letters, I feel better. I feel like I have reclaimed the writer within. I found the part of me that had moved out of the way for the sake of technology. For me, this past week has been a rebirth.
I know there are probably many of you shaking your head and saying, “What the heck is the big deal? I can type my feelings just as well as I can write them!”. Perhaps others of you are stuck in a writer’s block mode right now, struggling to get in touch with the act of writing again. Why not try hand-writing a letter to a friend. You may find yourself experiencing an “aha” moment (along with a little writer’s cramp)
as you put your pen to paper and discover that writing a letter for old time’s sake, is just what you needed to help you move forward with your story or poem. Write a letter to a friend about the first letter you ever wrote. How old were you when you wrote it? To whom was it written? What was going on in your life at the time that you couldn’t wait to write the letter and tell that person all about i?
Have Fun!
Until next time,
Walk in beauty, write life with passion!
Did you ever have a pen pal?
What country did he or she live in?
Have you ever written a fan letter?
by Debra Thornley on Sep.05, 2009, under life, writing prompts
Friday Writing Warm Up: An Interview With A Letter
The other night I was channel surfing and came across the Daytime Emmy Awards show just in time to see the entire Sesame Street cast on the stage for a special lifetime achievement award in celebration of 40 years on the air. They showed clips of shows from each decade, and I fondly remembered the Sesame Street years of my children’s lives in the late 70’s and early 80’s. I knew all the songs from that period: The Alligator King song about the number seven was my favorite, and I would go to bed with that song going through my mind after having sung it with my son before tucking him in for the night.
This writing prompt is for those of you who are writing for children. I thought it would be fun, in honor of Sesame Street, to write an interview with a letter of the alphabet. Make a list of between five and ten questions to ask, then pick a letter of the alphabet and write a dialogue with it as if you are conducting an interview. For a twist on this, you can pick a pair of letters that are usually found together like Q and U and interview them as a couple. Have Fun!
Until Next time,
Walk in beauty, write life with passion!
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