Exposure—now there’s a threatening word. Are you up for an armchair adventure?
Let’s play “Exposure: Risk and Gift,” a creativity game I dreamed up, well, just because.
Exposure: Risk beginning, step 1
- Using paper (or your device), write I’m afraid 25 times down the left-hand margin
- Finish each phrase with whatever comes to mind, without lifting pen from paper (or fingers from keys)
- Circle any “I’m afraid” statements that alarmed or surprised or annoyed you
Exposure: Risk writing, step 2
If you read my recent post on the Camperdown Elm, here is the same tree, seen later in the day and from another angle. Trick-or-treat, anyone?
Using one of the statements you circled, write a letter, or a list, a poem, or a song, or even a partial scene using one of these phrases below (or one of your own) as a kickstart:
- They planted me deep, downhill from the Ferris place, never suspecting . . .
- Sleepwalking inside somebody’s nightmare . . .
- I never meant to . . .
Or you could write from the viewpoint of someone discovering the cure for Dutch Elm Disease . . .
Play with possibilities, no matter how crazy, and see what happens. Sometimes free writing unearths an emotion that’s “under the radar,” eating at your inner peace.
Exposure: Offer a gift, step 3
The Camperdown Elm in November dusk (first two photos) looks pretty creepy.
The Camperdown Elm below was taken in April, in afternoon light.
Margaret Atwood once said: So much depends on the light, and the way you squint.
Now take what you’ve risked writing so far and “gift it” with one or two of the following:
- A favorite time of day, or weather
- A new character
- A quote or proverb you love
Follow wherever the words want to take you. Stop when you feel done.
Read back what you’ve written. Has the overall mood and/or meaning changed?
Have your thoughts about the underlying fear you identified changed?
Exposure: Optional
Consider emailing me what you created. I’d love to read it!
Was this experiment interesting or enlightening?
Would you enjoy a similar creative prompt from time time?
p.s. To see a stunning full view of the Filoli Camperdown Elm tree in bloom as well as the fabulous winged seedpods in close-up, click here. (scroll to image #5)