Episode 322: Searching for Inspiration

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On August 16, 2025, Kasie and Rex were feeling uninspired. Here’s the show notes for what they did about it.

Theme for the day

Searching for Inspiration

Agenda

  • Quick catch-up
  • What does it mean to be inspired?
  • Where can we find inspiration?
  • Some go-to strategies
Photo by cottonbro studio on Pexels.com

Segment 1

We’re in the dog days of summer which can lead to a slow, reluctance to turn to the screen or the page and get new stories generated. Why do we feel this?

What can we do about it?

This writer offered a few tips and tricks:

  • Read, read and read again – other writers can gently or violently shake something free in us
  • Surround yourself with other writers – group, conferences, readings, book stores, go where the writers are
  • Be open to conversation – you might avoid too much socializing when you’re focused, but right now you need conversation, so seek it out
  • Spend time elsewhere – travel or retreat, get into a new space to shake yourself out of mundaneity

Our AI answers also suggest immersing yourself in the world. But being intentional about it is what matters. Don’t just move through the world, observe and record what you’re seeing and let those observations light the fuse to new stories.

Segment 2

Let’s talk about creativity as an inspiration. Do you watch other stories? Veer into nonfiction books? See concerts or artwork? 

Some image or phrase might inspire you to write the backstory or the what-happened-next. Sometimes movies can have a side character that makes you want to write what that character might be doing otherwise.

Can you be spontaneously inspired? What are the results of such experiences? Novels? Short stories?

Segment 3

Planned writing exercises? Yes, please. Some prompts might start a new story or inspire a character or longer work.

I like a writing prompt exercise but sometimes others’ prompts are dumb. Where do you get writing prompts?

Google AI. For real. Just ask it for writing prompts for adult writers. Otherwise you’ll get a bunch of elementary school prompts like “how was your summer vacation?”

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