How to Let Your Ordinary Thoughts Become Brilliant Writing Ideas
Relax and let the spark happen

Without inspiration, the best powers of the mind remain dormant. There is a fuel in us which needs to be ignited with sparks. ~Johann Gottfried Herder
You’re probably wondering what the cover photo has to do with formulating brilliant writing ideas. Never fear. There is a thread of logic behind my madness.
I originally created the mosaic art piece with a zillion bits of fabric of various shapes, sizes, and colors. When completed, it immediately struck me as the perfect image of how my thought process works, both as an artist and a writer. We’ll talk a little more about that later in this article.
Where to find the sparks
When I thought of each of those tiny bits of fabric as sights, sounds, emotions, memories, and experiences, I realized how flooded my life is with idea-creating material. Each of our lives overflows with elements of life, some connected, some disjointed. Much of them are inherent, stored deep within. While many more are external yet in constant orbit around us. The reason they’re elusive is that they’re ordinary, normal, so we tend to take them for granted, or ignore them altogether.
How to ignite the spark
“Success usually comes to those who are too busy to be looking for it.” ~Henry David Thoreau
I find the harder I consciously try to make a spark appear, the less apt I am to succeed. It’s when I simply relax and live my life naturally that the free flow of energy starts working for me. However, I’ve developed a particular mindset which aids the process. That mindset is one of insatiable curiosity. There are three questions that are perpetually circling in my mind.
- What if?
- If I were…then what?
- Why?
When one or more of these questions is applied to anything I see, hear, smell, taste, feel, see, or experience, the sparks begin to fly. You can put this strategy to work for yourself by making them your own in the following ways.
“We learn more by looking for the answer to a question and not finding it than we do from learning the answer itself.” — Lloyd Alexander
Learn to keep it simple
Start with the ordinary events in your daily life. Here are three examples. 1)What if I changed my toothpaste? 2)If I were wealthy would I still rise at 5 AM to write? 3)Why don’t I eat pizza for breakfast since it’s one of my favorite foods? Now, can you find the brilliant writing ideas those three questions spark?
Question (1)
- How and who invented toothpaste?
- Do all cultures use toothpaste? If not, what do other cultures use?
- How to choose a toothpaste your kids will like.
Question (2)
- What motivates a writer to write?
- How to set the best time to write.
- Does the abundance or lack of money dictate my desire to write?
Question (3)
- Why are certain foods specific to certain meals and how does culture make a difference?
- What are the health benefits of eating pizza for breakfast as opposed to an evening snack?
- Would I allow my child to eat pizza for breakfast?
By applying the three questions to one ordinary event in my daily life I generated writing ideas from 9 different angles. Where did they come from? The simple things I do every morning. I get up. I brush my teeth. I choose what I’ll eat for breakfast. WOW! Who knew there were so many wonderful writing ideas hidden in that routine?
Take notes
I learned that I needed to jot down short little notes pinpointing specific idea generators in my life. This process was necessary because my life’s routine is very ordinary and without conscious thought, I’d never think of looking for inspirational sparks.
This morning, I changed my routine of where I drink my first cup of coffee — usually at my computer desk. Instead, I took advantage of a beautiful morning and sat on my patio which is covered by a Wisteria arbor. As I looked up through the green Wisteria vine at the beauty of the baby-blue sky overhead, I allowed my question process to kick in.
- What if the sky were green and the Wisteria vine were blue. Would it matter and why? From that came a whole list of new ideas on color theory, the emotional impact of color, why humans are drawn to color and have color preferences, etc.
The point is this. There is no such thing as WRITER’S BLOCK! There are only ideas that writers ignore…
Tap into your feelings — let your emotions free
When we reach deep where are emotions live, we tap into a whole new universe of questions leading to ideas from a personal perspective. And don’t forget, you’re not an alien. If you can feel it, others will also, and they will be drawn to read what you write.
Keep it up
Practice this concept until it becomes second-nature to you as a writer. Create a title for each brilliant idea you generate and put it in your draft folder. In time, you’ll have more ideas than you can write. You might even share a few. Always be willing to adapt an original spark to fit your current needs. After all, you are the owner of your own thoughts, right?
The Cover Photo
“Dream delivers us to dream, and there is no end to illusion. Life is like a train of moods like a string of beads, and, as we pass through them, they prove to be many-colored lenses which paint the world their own hue. . . . ” ― Ralph Waldo Emerson
After finishing the piece of fabric art, I photographed it and then did some Photoshop manipulations to create the window vignettes. The vignettes illustrate how story ideas are often hidden in a bigger scenario. It also demonstrates that brilliant story ideas are multifaceted. I’ve always thought that since we live in a three-dimensional world, I ought to be able to find at least three angles on any subject from which I could write.
Takeaway
There is no such thing as WRITER’S BLOCK! There are only ideas that writers ignore…





