![]() If you are suffering from writer's block or just like to play around with words, here are 25 writing exercises to get your creative juices flowing, so you, too, can create characters that project emotion, just like the rabbits in the photo. 1. The “Bad Day” Test Write a scene where your character has the worst day imaginable—spills coffee on themselves, misses a deadline, and gets attacked by an angry goose. How do they handle it? Gracefully? Meltdown? Bribe the goose? 2. Pet Peeve Rant Let your character go on a full-on, irrational rant about something minor—like the sound of people chewing or socks that disappear in the dryer. Bonus points if it turns into an existential crisis. 3. Who Would They Be in a Zombie Apocalypse? Would your character be a fearless leader, a coward hiding in a potato sack, or someone starting a gluten-free café for survivors? Write a short scene. 4. Secret Snack Confession Your character is caught red-handed with their weirdest guilty pleasure snack. Write the confrontation. Is it ranch-flavored Oreos? Tuna in peanut butter? Explain the obsession. 5. The Ex Text Your character accidentally texts their ex something meant for someone else. What did they say, and how do they recover? (Or do they spiral?) 6. Musical Soul Assign your character a theme song. Now write a scene where that song starts playing in real life. What happens? Do they dance, cry, sue the radio? 7. Childhood Hero Who was their childhood hero? A parent? A Power Ranger? A bus driver named Carl? Now write about how that person inspired them—or let them down. 8. Room Service Personality Test Your character is in a fancy hotel. What do they order from room service at 2 a.m.? Do they flirt with the staff? Eat the tiny soaps? 9. Terrible Tinder Bio Write your character’s dating profile—but make it absolutely cringey. Then write the first awkward message they send someone. 10. Arrested… But Why? Your character has been arrested. What’s the charge? Make it ridiculous (stealing garden gnomes, trying to marry a celebrity wax figure). How do they explain it? 11. First Crush Flashback Describe your character’s first crush in painful detail. What did they do to impress them? How did it go wrong? (Please say it involved glitter.) 12. Talk to the Plant Your character owns a houseplant. Write a monologue where they vent to it. What secrets spill out while watering the ficus? 13. Bizarre Talent Show They’ve entered a small-town talent show. What odd skill do they reveal? (Mouth trumpet? Dramatic readings of cereal boxes?) How do the judges react? 14. Awkward Elevator Moment Your character gets stuck in an elevator with their boss, ex, nemesis, or their crush. What do they say? Who breaks first? 15. Text Message Autocorrect Fiasco Your character sends a serious message, but autocorrect has other plans. Write the exchange. Bonus if it starts a fight or proposal. 16. Tattoo Reveal They drunkenly got a tattoo years ago. What is it, where is it, and how do they explain it now? (“It’s a wizard banana. I was going through things.”) 17. Reality TV Meltdown They’re a contestant on a chaotic reality show. Write the moment they snap. Is it during a cooking challenge? A group date? A goat yoga session? 18. Apology Tour Your character has to apologize to three people. What did they do to each? Write one of the apologies—but make it very awkward. 19. The “Unhelpful” Advice Column They write an anonymous advice column, but they are terrible at it. Write two letters and their hilariously bad responses. 20. Time-Traveling Tantrum Your character meets their younger self. What do they argue about? (Hair choices? Life decisions? That time they ate glitter?) 21. What’s in Their Junk Drawer? Inventory your character’s junk drawer. What bizarre objects are in there? Why do they keep an old retainer, a slingshot, and a broken mood ring? 22. Worst Job Ever Describe your character’s worst job in painful, vivid detail. Who was their boss? What did they spill? What made them quit—or get fired? 23. Caught Lying About a Hobby They’ve pretended to know about opera/coding/birdwatching to impress someone. Now they’re asked to demonstrate. Disaster ensues. 24. Late-Night Google Searches List five things your character Googled between 1:00 and 2:00 a.m. on a Tuesday. Then write their inner monologue during search #3. 25. The Imaginary Friend Reunion Your character’s childhood imaginary friend shows up—very real and very mad about being forgotten. What happens next? Use these exercises to build character profiles, punch up dialogue, or find unexpected plot turns. Funny doesn’t mean shallow—sometimes humor digs into the most human truths.
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![]() Dialogue is the lifeblood of fiction. It breathes movement into still scenes and reveals character without description. But crafting dialogue that rings true and pulls the reader in—without sounding like a robot or a Shakespearean time traveler—takes practice. Whether you’re writing a novel, screenplay, short story, or memoir, these 20 exercises will help sharpen your dialogue-writing chops. 1. Eavesdrop and Transcribe Find a café, park bench, or public space. Listen (ethically and discreetly!) to snippets of conversation and jot them down. Pay attention to how people interrupt each other, pause, use slang, and trail off. Real speech patterns are irregular and layered with subtext. 2. Two People, One Secret Write a scene where two characters talk, but one is hiding a secret. The trick? Show the tension through what’s not said. Use awkward pauses, deflections, and evasive responses. 3. Argue Without Yelling Write an argument between two people who love each other. Avoid shouting, insults, or name-calling. Make it emotionally charged without going melodramatic. Think “The Notebook,” not “The Jerry Springer Show.” 4. Change the Context Take a scene from a favorite book, movie, or your own writing and transplant it into a new setting. What if the “I love you” scene from your romance novel took place during a bank robbery? 5. Mute One Character Write a conversation where one person cannot (or will not) speak. The other must carry the conversation, interpreting the other's gestures, expressions, or silence. 6. Text Message Tango Write a dialogue in the form of a text conversation. Emojis, abbreviations, typos, and all. This helps you explore voice with extreme brevity. 7. Age Swap Create a conversation between a 7-year-old and a 70-year-old. What words do they use? How do their concerns differ? Can you make it funny, tender, or surprising? 8. Overheard in a Fantasy Tavern Drop two characters into a magical or futuristic setting—elves in a coffee shop, robots in therapy. How does the setting influence their vocabulary, tone, or urgency? 9. Use Only Subtext Write a scene where the characters are talking about dinner plans, but the subtext is about their crumbling marriage. The surface words are boring—the meaning beneath is everything. 10. Cut the Stage Directions Write a scene with just lines of dialogue—no tags, no actions, no “he said/she said.” Can the reader tell who’s talking? Does it still make sense? This strengthens voice and rhythm. 11. Try the Hemingway Challenge Write a conversation using only short sentences and plain language. Avoid adjectives and adverbs. Let simplicity carry the emotional weight. 12. One Sentence Each Create a scene where each character can only speak in one sentence at a time. This forces clarity and punch in each line. 13. Switch Genres Take a horror scene and rewrite the dialogue as if it were from a romantic comedy—or vice versa. Same situation, wildly different voices. 14. Read It Aloud (in Funny Voices) Read your dialogue out loud in different character voices. If something feels clunky or stiff, your ears will catch it even when your eyes don’t. 15. Interruptions Galore Write a conversation between two characters where they keep cutting each other off. Use em dashes, ellipses, and line breaks. Real speech is messy. 16. Dialogue as Action Create a high-stakes situation—like disarming a bomb, giving birth, or hiding from zombies. Let the dialogue move the action. Avoid exposition; keep it breathless and reactive. 17. Character Swap Take two characters from different stories and write a dialogue between them. What happens when Sherlock Holmes meets Katniss Everdeen? Conflicting speech styles reveal character fast. 18. The Silent Third Wheel Write a two-person dialogue but imagine a third person is in the room. How does that change what’s said and what’s left out? 19. Make It Weird Give your characters a bizarre setting or context: one’s a mime, the other a parrot. Or they’re underwater. Or in a dream. Weirdness loosens creative inhibitions. 20. Back-to-Back Monologues Instead of writing a back-and-forth, write two characters talking past each other—like they’re both waiting to speak, not listening. This reflects how people often really talk. Bonus Tip: Steal and Remix Borrow lines of dialogue from books, movies, and real life. Rewrite them for your characters. Changing context often reveals new meaning and voice. Good dialogue doesn’t just “sound” real—it feels real. It has rhythm, purpose, subtext, and most importantly, voice. Like music, it takes time to develop an ear for it. But with consistent practice, you’ll start to hear the beats that make conversation compelling. So open that notebook. Let your characters talk. Interrupt each other. Dodge questions. Whisper secrets. And most of all—say something worth hearing. Now, go write something they can’t stop reading. ![]() Writing a draft is like building a house out of words—drafty, hopeful, and a bit crooked in spots. That’s where editors come in. They're the skilled contractors, designers, and inspectors who help transform your rough creation into something structurally sound, polished, and dare we say, stunning. But here’s the twist: not all editors do the same thing. Just as you wouldn’t hire an electrician to lay tile or a plumber to paint the walls, you need the right editor at the right time in your writing process. So buckle up, wordsmiths! Let’s explore the four main types of editors—what they do, when to call them in, and why each one is essential to bringing your writing from rough draft to radiant. 1. Developmental Editor: The Big Picture Visionary Nickname: The Architect When to Use: At the beginning or after your first draft What They Do: Structure, clarity, flow, and content guidance Developmental editors (sometimes called content editors or substantive editors) are the macro-thinkers of the editing world. They zoom out to see the whole shape of your work—whether it’s a novel, memoir, blog series, or business proposal—and help you answer the biggest questions:
Quote to Remember: "The first draft is just you telling yourself the story." – Terry Pratchett A developmental editor helps make sure that story makes sense to others, too. Pro Tip: Use a developmental editor early—don’t wait until everything is polished only to realize your ending doesn’t land or your thesis is MIA. 2. Line Editor: The Stylistic Surgeon Nickname: The Flow Doctor When to Use: After your structure is solid What They Do: Sentence-level clarity, tone, rhythm, and expression A line editor dives deep into your actual sentences—not to fix typos, but to make your writing sing. They look at your tone, pacing, transitions, word choice, and paragraph flow. If developmental editing is about what you’re saying, line editing is about how you’re saying it. They’ll help you smooth clunky transitions, vary sentence length for rhythm, and punch up lifeless prose. In short, they make your writing sound like the best version of you. Example Fix: Before: “The situation caused her to feel a significant amount of distress.” After: “She was overwhelmed.” Quote to Remember: "Good writing is clear thinking made visible." – Bill Wheeler Line editors make sure that clear thinking comes across in every sentence. Pro Tip: Use a line editor when your story or argument is set, but the way you’re telling it feels awkward, stiff, or confusing. 3. Copy Editor: The Grammar Guardian Nickname: The Rule Enforcer When to Use: After your line edit is complete What They Do: Grammar, punctuation, consistency, and style Copy editors are the detail-oriented heroes who ensure your work is correct, consistent, and professional. They won’t rearrange your chapters or suggest a better metaphor, but they will spot that missing serial comma, fix that misused “effect,” and point out that your protagonist’s eye color mysteriously changed from chapter 3 to chapter 14. They follow style guides (like APA, MLA, or Chicago) and can create a style sheet for your project to track things like hyphenation, capitalization, and preferred spellings. Quote to Remember: "Editing might be a bloody trade, but knives aren’t the exclusive property of butchers. Surgeons use them too." – Blake Morrison Copy editors are the surgeons of the writing world—precise, efficient, and life-saving. Pro Tip: Every writer needs a copy editor before publishing, submitting, or launching. Typos kill credibility—don’t skip this step. 4. Proofreader: The Eagle-Eyed Final Inspector Nickname: The Typos Terminator When to Use: After layout or formatting, right before publishing What They Do: Spelling errors, formatting issues, missed punctuation, and final polish Proofreaders are the last line of defense between you and public embarrassment. They scan for the tiny but critical things that copy editors might’ve missed—think double spaces, rogue quotation marks, and page number glitches. They often work on PDFs, galleys, or final web drafts. While proofreaders don’t make major changes, their job is essential for a polished, professional finish. Think of them as quality control for your masterpiece. Quote to Remember: "A writer only begins a book. A reader finishes it." – Samuel Johnson And a proofreader makes sure that finished product doesn’t have spinach in its teeth. Pro Tip: Always proofread your final copy—even if you think it’s perfect. (Spoiler: It’s probably not.) When to Use Each Editor (Quick Recap): STAGE OF WRITING: Idea/First Draft TYPE OF EDITOR: Developmental Editor FOCUS: Structure, content, coherence STAGE OF WRITING: Solid Draft TYPE OF EDITOR: Line Editor FOCUS: Style, voice, sentence clarity STAGE OF WRITING: Nearly Polished TYPE OF EDITOR: Copy Editor FOCUS: Grammar, consistency, usage STAGE OF WRITING: Final Layout/Pre-Pub TYPE OF EDITOR: Proofreader FOCUS: Typos, formatting, last-minute fixes Final Thought: Editing Isn’t Optional—It’s Essential The best writers in the world still need editors. In fact, because they’re great, they know editing is what transforms decent writing into unforgettable work. So don’t be afraid to ask for help. Whether you're self-publishing a novel, submitting a term paper, crafting a killer newsletter, or launching your first blog post, there’s an editor out there who can make your words sharper, stronger, and shine like a diamond in a sea of dull pebbles. After all, you’ve done the hard part—writing. Now give your words the support they deserve. Because the world doesn’t need more perfect writers. It needs more writers willing to get better—and finish. ![]() If you’ve ever stared at a blinking cursor thinking it was mocking you, or whispered to your coffee mug, “I have no idea what I’m doing,” then friend, allow me to introduce you to your new creative sidekick: Artificial Intelligence. Yes, AI. The same tech that powers self-driving cars, recommends videos of baby goats in pajamas, and reminds your smart fridge you’re out of oat milk can also help you write. But not in a soul-sucking, robot-ghostwriting-your-novel kind of way. Think of AI not as a replacement for your creativity, but as an espresso shot for your writing brain. Here’s how AI can become your literary co-pilot—and maybe even your secret weapon. 1. Brainstorming Buddy Writing ideas don’t always arrive when you want them. Sometimes they sneak up in the shower or go on vacation just when you sit down to write. AI, however, doesn’t take weekends off. Ask an AI to help you brainstorm and—voila!—you’ve got a flurry of ideas, character names, plot twists, or blog titles in seconds. Want a story set on Mars with a talking dog and a twist ending? Ask AI to give you five versions. Trying to name a lifestyle blog that sounds cool but not cringey? AI’s got a list. Stuck trying to write a wedding speech that’s heartfelt but not cheesy? It’ll draft a toast that might make the groom cry (in a good way). 2. Outlining Assistant Some writers thrive in chaos. Others need structure like oxygen. If you fall into the second category—or you’re just trying to organize your thoughts—AI can help build an outline that turns your spaghetti-brain scribbles into a five-star buffet of organized brilliance. Need a persuasive essay? AI can sketch out your intro, main points, supporting evidence, and conclusion faster than you can say “thesis statement.” Writing a novel? AI can suggest a chapter-by-chapter breakdown. It’s like having a project manager for your creative process—minus the awkward weekly Zoom check-ins. 3. First-Draft Firestarter First drafts are the wild west of writing. They’re messy, unpolished, and full of that inner critic whispering, “This is garbage.” AI doesn’t care. It doesn’t judge. It helps you get words on the page—fast. You can give it a prompt like “write a scene where two rival magicians meet at a diner,” and it’ll give you a starting point. You can feed it a rough paragraph and ask it to expand. You can say, “Write this in the style of Jane Austen meets Quentin Tarantino,” and it’ll give it a try (results may vary, but it’s usually hilarious). Remember, the goal of a first draft is momentum, not perfection. AI’s great at keeping you moving. 4. Editing Sidekick (Who’s Not Afraid to Be Honest) Editing your own work is like trying to tickle yourself—it doesn’t really work. You’re too close to the material. AI, on the other hand, is the objective editor you didn’t know you needed. It doesn’t flinch at pointing out passive voice, repetitive phrases, clunky sentences, or that time you accidentally wrote “their” instead of “they’re.” Ask AI to suggest tighter wording. Have it rewrite a paragraph in a more conversational tone. You can even feed it your whole article and say, “Make this sound like Brené Brown on a caffeine high,” and it’ll try to oblige. Bonus: it doesn’t charge by the hour or eat the last donut in the writers’ room. 5. Grammar Guardian and Style Sage Sure, grammar checkers have been around for a while, but AI takes things up a notch. Not only can it correct grammar and punctuation, it can adapt to different writing styles: business casual, academic, poetic, humorous, sassy—you name it. Want your writing to sound more like Hemingway? AI can channel those short, punchy sentences. Prefer the whimsical metaphors of Neil Gaiman? It’ll give it a shot. Need your cover letter to sound confident without crossing into arrogance? AI threads that needle with style. 6. Research Assistant That Doesn’t Get Distracted We all know how it goes: you search for a quick fact, and two hours later, you’re reading about wombat square poop and wondering where your day went. AI can help you gather background info fast—definitions, summaries, historical context, quotes, and more—without the detour into the weird corners of the internet. You can ask things like, “Summarize the plot of Pride and Prejudice,” or “Give me five bullet points about climate change,” or “What’s the difference between affect and effect?” Boom. Done. No need to fall into a Google-shaped rabbit hole. 7. Creative Coach & Cheerleader AI isn’t just about words—it’s also great for motivation. Need a daily writing prompt? AI can serve up a fresh idea every morning like a literary barista. Want to gamify your writing habit? Use AI to help track your word count, set goals, and celebrate milestones. You can even vent to AI when you're stuck. Say, “I don’t know what to write next,” and it might ask questions, suggest directions, or just throw out an unexpected idea that rekindles your spark. Sometimes, all you need is a nudge. The Secret Sauce: You + AI = Magic Now, let’s be clear: AI is not a replacement for your voice, your vision, or your hard-won wisdom. It doesn’t have your life experience, your unique rhythm, or your heartbreakingly beautiful way of describing a summer sunset. What it does have is speed, stamina, and an unshakable ability to show up when you’re tired, blocked, or doubting your brilliance. It’s not the artist—it’s the brush. You are still the writer. AI just makes your job easier, faster, and sometimes more fun. So, the next time you’re facing the dreaded blank page, don’t panic. Fire up your favorite AI tool, pour another cup of coffee, and get ready to write like never before. Because every great writer deserves a great sidekick. Even if it runs on algorithms. We worked with Olivia and Garnet on this heartfelt book, 17 Runs. This is the trailer for the book that Independent Book Review called, "raw...dialogue that invites you to reflect on your own personal journey," and BookLife Review said was a "guide inviting you to living life well, inspired by a touching friendship."
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July 2025
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