Too good to NOT share.
From brainzooming.com
19 Articles on Creative Wave Making

Branching out with my writing
Developing a powerful #writing habit buff.ly/2ra5I7g w/ @Honoree
“Be ruthless about protecting writing days…”

http://www.advicetowriters.com/home/2014/8/6/be-ruthless-about-protecting-writing-days.html
7 Free Windows Apps for Exploring Your Creative Side muo.co/2taPMAL
Serious writers write, inspired or not. Over time they discover that routine is a better friend than inspiration.
–RALPH KEYES
Has your stream of creative ideas dried up? Here’s the Answer! hubs.ly/H07C6xZ0
This list, which I believe originated from a set of Tweets by Pixar storyboard artist Emma Coats in 2012, is a go-to resource/set of reminders for me as I work on my fiction.
Multiple iterations are spread across the Internet.
Here is one: 22 Storytelling Tips by Emma Coats
Tim Ferriss, self-proclaimed human guinea pig, suggests we define our fears.
For creatives everywhere, I would think.
from my book-in-progress, Dating Wisdom–Yeah, Riiight

Opening comment: I hope readers gain even half the value as I do from writing this down freehand and rehashing/posting it.
But feel free to throw money, coffee, good pastries, or an ‘I adopted a shelter pet!’ certificate my way. [I’m a pretty simple guy, really.]
So, more takeaways from one of my daily go-to books for changing/reinforcing my thinking: Austin Kleon’s Show Your Work: **
Become a Documentarian of What You Do.
“Whether you share it or not, documenting and recording
your process as you go alon
g has its own rewards. You’ll start to see the work you’re doing more clearly and feel like you’re making progress.” [It’s what I’m trying to do at jrmays.com.]
Be an Amateur
“Because they have little to lose, amateurs are willing to try anything and share the results. They take chances, experiment, and follow their whims.” [I have a poster on my wall: If not now, when? Works for me.]
“The world is changing at such a rapid rate, it’s turning us all into amateurs. Even for professionals, the best way to flourish is to retain an amateur’s spirit and embrace uncertainty and the unknown.”
Read Obituaries.
“Reading about people who are dead now and did things with their lives makes me want to get up and do something decent with mine.” [In his case, be a good dad and husband, create, curate, and share art and experience.]
He continues, “Take inspiration from the people who muddled through life before you–they all started out as amateurs, and they got where they were going by making do with what they were given and having the guts to put themselves out there. Follow their example.”
Cruising my TweetDeck dashboard…
Note to self: Great to spew the wisdom of others. It’s another whole ballgame to follow through.
My takeaways from The 90-Day Rewrite by Alan Watt, also author of The 90-Day Novel
Some examples:
Day 46: Today–Write for five minutes beginning with ‘My story is about…’. Surprise yourself and be willing to write the forbidden.
Day 57: Today–Where you choose to reveal information can alter the pace and meaning of your story. Are your story’s revelations placed as effectively as possible?
“If it seems strange to simply be re-outlining something that we have already written, that is not what we are doing. Rather, we are allowing ourselves to imagine the most compelling version of our story, which may contain large swaths of existing material, but also material yet to be written.”
I’m keeping this short so you can follow up. Great series that can launch us from the funk of everyday life and the other media we consume.
The episodes, on Netflix, are just over 20 minutes. http://www.leonlogothetis.com/netflix/
It’s based on the book of the same name by Leon Legothetis.
Who knows–it might even set us on our own course of kindness.
Perfect photo for Memorial Day…