What the Bird Said

 
bird, heart, grey and gold rainbow
 
 

What is that jewel-eyed bird saying to the glowing glass heart in the sky?

The answer lies inside your notebook. Unlock your own truth by picking up your favorite pen, setting a timer for ten minutes, and writing whatever words flow through your heart and hand onto the page.  

          Your title: "What the Bird Said"
          Your topic: Your writing

I tested out this prompt on the participants in two recent Virtual Writing Studio sessions. Their responses were lyrical, honest, and wise:

  • The bird said: I perch in awe of the perfect writing – the heart – that stands out in the grey background, ready to take flight towards it. I prime my wings and aim toward clear, concrete, concise, and colourful writing. (Vicky, UK)

  • I overheard the bird talking not long after I presented a conference paper titled "What can positive psychology offer to maths teaching and learning?" The bird said: "So now we are expected to be psychologists as well as maths lecturers? That bird is crazy! If I try to advise students on things beyond maths, why should they believe me?" (Anita, South Africa)

  • I wrote about a rejection letter that I received last week. When I criticized my writing and myself, the bird reminded me that I should be more compassionate and supportive of myself. (Angelica, Texas, USA)

  • The bird said: Perhaps try writing less and listening more. Research is a crafting art. Listen for the story in the sunrise, in the river running, in the teeth of old auntie casuarina. You worry too much about writing. Words are helpful, but they are not enough to fully express a life well-lived, or the ancient wisdom of Indigenous Songlines, or the importance of earthworm encounters. Sit with me awhile and we will listen together. (Nina, Australia)

  • The bird said: Let your writing move like me through the blue sky … let it go anywhere; it can soar to great heights and it can swoop close to the ground. When you need to, you can take a rest on high branches; at other times, you can write with others – a murmuration of writespacers. You fly to make meaning, to come to know but most importantly, to connect your lines of flight with others. (James, UK)

  • “Take heart,” the bird said. “As the sun burns, so does the ever-present inspiration for your writing”. How did it know that I was in the process of floundering, lost in a sea of data, demands, and deadlines? I sat back and contemplated its words, feeling for the first time in a while a sense of calm as I turned back to the screen. The words on the page suddenly seemed clearer, less imposing. The sun was in the sky, it was heart-shaped, and birds talked. Things weren’t so bad after all, and neither was my writing. (Victoria, Australia)

Creative writing prompts like this one can help you discover things about yourself that you didn't know you know. They fire our imagination and light up our words.

For more writing prompts like this one, check out the"Writing Warmups" playlist on my Helen's Word YouTube channel or visit my Live Writing Studio, where I'll invite you to get your creative juices flowing with some playful, permissive freewriting before we turn to more "serious" writing tasks. If you're not already a WriteSPACE member, you can use the discount code SNEAKPEEK for a sneaky month of free membership.

I'd love to see you there!


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