10 Creative Things to Do While Waiting – Lite

“Waiting in line is a great opportunity to meet people, daydream, or play.” —Hunter Doherty “Patch” Adams

Image courtesy of Ambro / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Image courtesy of Ambro / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

You hate waiting—in a line, in a waiting room, in a restaurant foyer. It drives you crazy.

Forget about being productive. If waiting drives you crazy, then have some fun creating suggestions like these.

Best for while you wait in a waiting room:

mage courtesy of Ambro / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

mage courtesy of Ambro / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

1. Pretend you’re working on a survey.

Say it’s a gynecologist’s office. On the back of a receipt from your  purse, keep counts of the number of women who wear:

  • lipstick
  • skirts
  • sneakers
  • costume jewelry
  • nail polish

Work up the percentages. Optional: Blog about the GYN fashion trend.

2. Rip coupons and articles out of your own beat-up magazine.

The magazine must appear to belong to the waiting room. Track how many people give you dirty looks. If you’re the brave type, interview them. Ask what bothered them. The noise or the appearance of vandalism? Another blog possibility.

3. Re-cross your legs in sets of 10, alternating legs.

You can treat yourself to dessert after your appointment—guilt free.

4. Try new fashion designs with your clothes.

Roll up your sleeves. Roll down your knee-highs. Tuck in your collar around your neck. Button up your sweater and then unbutton the middle buttons.

5. Study others’ noses.

Pretend you’re a plastic surgeon. Decide how you’d rearrange each schnoz in the room.

6. Remove everything from your purse or pocket.

Make collages on the coffee table.

Best for while you stand in a line

Waiting in Line7. Give the person in front of you a massage.

Good chance you’ll get to move up a space in line for your kindness.

8. Pretend you’re at a party and perform the Snail Shuffle.

  • Optional. Place your hands on the hips of the person in front of you.
  • Creep your right foot out to the side, placing your heel on the ground. Inch your right foot back in.
  • Repeat.
  • Creep your left foot out to the side, placing your heel on the ground. Inch your left foot back in.
  • Repeat.
  • Scuff forward once with both feet together.
  • Scuff backward once with both feet together.
  • Scuff forward three times. Keep the steps short.
  • Repeat the steps, until you reach the front of the line.

9. See how much closer you’d be to the front if you could rearrange people by height.

If the result is depressing, try rearranging from the least to most obnoxious. That should give you a better position—you minding your own business, and all.

10.See if you can pick up and return everything on the candy and gum racks before you reach the cashier.

Hey. Store people put those things along the checkout aisle for you to touch. If you succeed, they should give you a pack of gum.

You can use these ideas, or get creative with your own, and make your waits a little less painful.

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What creative activity have you come up with for us to try while we wait?

5 Steps to Tap “Greatest” Moments to Improve Your Creative Writing

“The wise learn from the experience of others, and the creative know how to make a crumb of experience go a long way.” —Eric Hoffer

Image courtesy of Evgeni Dinev at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Image courtesy of Evgeni Dinev at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

You realize you need strong emotional events for your character’s journey.

Try using greatest, closest, and funniest moments to pump up your story. Here’s how it works:

Step 1 Ask a question at your next social gathering, such as:

  • What situation was the moment you came closest to death?
  • What has been your greatest fear?
  • What was your greatest embarrassment?
  • What was the greatest injustice you suffered?
  • What was your funniest situation?
Image courtesy of PANPOTE at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Image courtesy of PANPOTE at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Example: What situation was the moment you came closest to death?

First, the facts:

Response 1: When she was twenty, she hiked a cliff path with her parents. The drop from the path to the boulder-filled creek below was over a hundred feet. She stumbled on a jutting rock and shot out her foot to steady herself on a smooth stone slanting toward the drop. It was wet and slippery. She slid toward the drop. Her mother caught her arm and pulled her back onto the path.

Image courtesy of SweetCrisis at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Image courtesy of SweetCrisis at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Response 2: On a dark night, a wasp in her car forced her to stop on the side of a deserted road and exit her car. A car pulled up alongside hers, and the lone man asked if her car had broken down. She said it hadn’t. He drove on a ways and then slowly made a U-turn. She jumped in her car, wasp or no wasp, and sped by him.

Image courtesy of artur84 at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Image courtesy of artur84 at FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Step 2 Ask the teller to expand on her emotions during the situation.

In telling mode:

Response 1: Desperately trying to get traction, she squealed. Her mother screamed. Afterwards she couldn’t stop shaking. She found it difficult to deal with the realization that her mother, without thinking, risked her own life to save hers.

Response 2: She was terrified the wasp would sting her. The man’s ogling eyes creeped her out. When he drove on, she was relieved. At his U-turn, her heart stopped. Forgetting the wasp, she panicked to escape him.

Step 3 Collect the stories and organize them by subject. I’d file these under Death Defying.

Step 4 Select a situation from your cache when you need a situation for a character.

Step 5 Massage the situation to fit your story. Let’s select Response 1.

Hikers_on_green_fieldsBriefly, in telling mode:

On a team-building weekend, Anne and her colleagues traverse a narrow path along a cliff. Anne precedes Cindy, the ambitious, disliked co-worker. Anne wishes she could pass three people and hike next to Mark, the hunk she and Cindy have their eyes on.

Anne is mentally grumbling about her bad luck, when she trips on a jutting rock. Her left foot zips out to steady herself. She can’t gain traction on the slippery stone slanted toward the boulder-filled creek below. Panicking, she yelps as she slides toward the hundred-foot drop. Cindy grabs her arm and pulls her back onto the path.

Later, still trembling, Anne refuses Mark’s invitation to eat beans together. She’s compelled to understand the woman who risked her life to save hers. She joins Cindy on a log.

    Tweetable

    • How to tap yours and others’ “greatest” moments to improve your creative writing.
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    Now you have a situation with real actions. You can add details and show the emotions.

    What situation have you used to enrich a story?

3 Ways to Pay It Forward in Your Creative Career

“You can’t live a perfect day without doing something for someone who will never be able to repay you.” —John Wooden

id-100172390.jpgReview your journey in your creative career. Haven’t you received valuable nuggets from others who made a difference in your creative work? You’re thankful, but often repaying your benefactors is nearly impossible.

Then pay forward the help you received. You can help another struggling artist.

3 Ways to Pay It Forward

1. Tweets, posts, and links

id-10074109.jpgThis era of social media helps us pay forward what we’ve received.

In a tweet, a blog post, or other social media, we can share with others the nuggets that were so helpful to us.

Example: In an online course, I received a better understanding of writing in deep point of view. So, I shared what I learned in a recent blog post by sharing several of my homework examples. I directed people to the instructor’s website, her book on the subject, and her online course. Hopefully, several of my readers learned from my examples and were encouraged to buy the book or sign up for the instructor’s next class.

2. Reviews

When we like others’ work, taking the time to write honest online reviews is one of the best things we can do to help others’ in our field.

nyt_book_review_of_cross-examination-djvu.jpg

Example: An author invited others who enjoyed her book to join her promotion team. She said we could join her team for the purpose of learning how a promotion team works. I have a book coming out soon and wanted to learn how to implement such a team.

As I helped the author get the word out about her book, I learned much from her. She also took the time to promote several of my blog posts. On her team, I learned how to write reviews on Goodreads and Amazon. Now when I like a book, I promote it through writing honest reviews. Paying forward what the author did for me.

3. Mentors and teachers

id-10034692.jpgWhile I’ve grown in the craft of writing, I’m amazed at how many people have stepped up to help me. Mentoring others pays forward the help we receive from our mentors. Teaching classes or workshops, or simply sharing what we’ve learned with our critique groups pays it forward also.

Example: I moved into a small rural community. A woman in my new church gave me a newspaper clipping about a local writers’ group.

The president of the writers’ group is an editor for a small publishing company. She took me under her wing. She encourages me, alerts me to valuable writing information, sends me links to opportunities, and invites me to teach elements of the craft in our local group.

I’m happy to lead workshops to pay forward her help. I believe God used the woman in my church to provide me with this wonderful mentor.

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  • You can pay forward the help you’ve received from others in your creative craft.
    click to tweet

How have you paid forward help you’ve received?

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American Christian Fiction Writers

American Christian Fiction Writers

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