how to brainstorm ideas for writing

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024
  • This is the most important technique every writer should learn. No shit!
    Brainstorming is the number one skill which will ALWAYS serve you as a writer, it will help you come up with new story ideas, help solve all sorts of plotting problems you come up against, and generally make your life easier.
    m y b e s t r e s o u r c e s
    [free course] how to plot on one page ✦ www.rachaelste...
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Komentáře • 117

  • @goldenangele7913
    @goldenangele7913 Před 4 lety +121

    ~TIMESTAMPS~
    5:49 - difference between a braindump and brainstorming
    7:17 - why do we brainstorm?
    9:25 - magic questions
    11:32 - The 5 Ideas Method (Rachael’s favorite method)
    13:26 - Mind Mapping/Clustering/Spider Diagrams Method
    14:00 - The Holmes Method
    14:41 - Talk it out! Method

    • @kateathend
      @kateathend Před 3 lety

      I like these older videos on writing. Oh yes, and we see what life was like in the good old days before pandemic times.
      The video starts out with a sassy little thing sticking her tongue out at-cha. Grrr. Then hello buns and she just talks to herself. Sweet, you are forgiven. We all come back to the basics to find our answers. Becoming a plumber. What? Make a blueprint but first play with leg go's analogy. Can I call it a thinking creatively method instead? I have a question and I'm going to think about it and then...write silly comments. Next question. Is this how? It will end up being a comment with no ending.
      Oh, the way were were back then was so grand!

    • @scottandy5848
      @scottandy5848 Před 3 lety

      You prolly dont care but does someone know of a trick to log back into an instagram account..?
      I somehow forgot the password. I appreciate any tips you can give me

    • @garrettfernando7415
      @garrettfernando7415 Před 3 lety

      @Scott Andy instablaster :)

    • @Iwasonceanonionwithnolayers
      @Iwasonceanonionwithnolayers Před 2 lety

      @@kateathend Whaaaat?

    • @kateathend
      @kateathend Před 2 lety

      @@Iwasonceanonionwithnolayers So sorry too much coffee and I was so much younger?

  • @RashmikaLikesBooks
    @RashmikaLikesBooks Před 6 lety +44

    I'm so glad you distinguished between brainstorming and brain dump. They're different cognitive processes that we use in all aspects of life, and i dont think I've seen many other writers talk about this, even though it's such a huge part of the process! I think much of this becomes so subconscious over time once we get used to using it. 😊So much of writing that felt scary at first is now second nature.

  • @LauraNettles
    @LauraNettles Před 6 lety +88

    Magic questions are magical. Do you have a list of some you go through when starting a novel? Your example was awesome but can you give us more of them please?

    • @AuthorBrittanyWang
      @AuthorBrittanyWang Před 6 lety +24

      Laura Nettles agreed! A video with examples of more magic questions would be amazingly helpful too!! 🙌

  • @TommyDonbavandauthor
    @TommyDonbavandauthor Před 6 lety +28

    Great video. Just what I needed. Here's a metaphor I like to use... Those first few obvious/boring ideas your brain spits out are the first couple of biscuits (cookies for US readers) in the pack. They're often broken or, if the pack has been opened, stale. You have to keep digging down to get the good biscuits.

  • @crib4046
    @crib4046 Před 3 lety +4

    This was very helpful thank you. I've been writing in my head for over a decade. Started a few novels, but never finished and done a few short stories. I love the creative process and am an artist as well. I find lately that my mind is freezing up. I get a story idea, but I can't seem to develop it while I'm awake. (I usually wait til bed-time, and in that time before sleep where my mind relaxes the story comes very easily).
    These ideas will help force my mind to work while I'm awake :P
    So right about bouncing off of other people. If I tell my hubby an idea, by the end of 20 minutes, we'll have had an accidental brainstorming session with many new ideas. Love it!

  • @wolfegaming36
    @wolfegaming36 Před 3 lety +4

    I've never heard of magic questions, but it makes so much sense! Thank you so much for the tips, I can't wait to try this out.

  • @lexilovely6237
    @lexilovely6237 Před rokem

    Thank you SO MUCH! So many brainstorming videos just say: write all your ideas down! and call that helpful tips. I've been wondering how to COME UP WITH IDEAS, and you showed me how! I thought brainstorming might be a skill to develop, because it's one of my writing weaknesses, and you confirmed that. THANK YOU. I finally something useful on brainstorming!

  • @howardthebritt
    @howardthebritt Před rokem

    @3:22 "ok that's great, how the F do I get the thing" -- I LOVE it here!!!! OMG!!

  • @Juicybeachgirls
    @Juicybeachgirls Před 3 lety +2

    You’re smart. I like you, and I’m glad to have found your channel. Thanks for the tips!!

  • @Karenseiley
    @Karenseiley Před 6 lety

    "Strap on a fucking head torch and go digging." Best advice ever lol

  • @videosandarticlesworkgroup5073

    Speaking to others about parts of story, plot, conflict a.o. with the responses giving you new ideas enriching or even changing existing parts, which you call Holmes Method - reminds me of people writing songs in a band when they not write them alone (ryan at Vids&Articles)

  • @cm24624
    @cm24624 Před 6 lety +19

    00:17 "Hello, cinnamon bun," back at ya! 😉💖

  • @Affenzunge
    @Affenzunge Před 5 lety +2

    Holmes method is something I just started recently and it has been so helpful. Just to declutter my mind, vent anxiety, see logic holes and get an new perspective on everything. You can even do it with relative strangers.

  • @simeondawkins5671
    @simeondawkins5671 Před 3 lety +1

    also love problem solving and im good at it :) so great :)

  • @farflunghopes
    @farflunghopes Před 3 lety +1

    I'm working through the 100 Day Writing Challenge by Tim Clare and he touches on the same points! So helpful to make lists to get into the divergent mindset thinking

  • @cjpreach
    @cjpreach Před 6 lety +12

    Great ideas! BTW - I talk to myself all the time. Why? Two reasons . . . (1) I like talking to intelligent people, and (2) I like hearing intelligent people talk. (Yes, I stole that from the late Zig Ziglar).

  • @SheridenGoldie
    @SheridenGoldie Před 5 lety +1

    This is great. I really loved that you made the connection between critical essays and novelling in your theme vid, and then this just blew my mind with using something I have used for essays, and connecting it with novelling. Asking Specific questions and listing answers/avenues of investigation is something I have always done for crafting essays but I had never thought to do that for problems in my stories. So thank you for making those connections and sharing them 😊

    • @RachaelStephen
      @RachaelStephen  Před 5 lety +1

      Aw that’s great to hear! It’ll get you far for sure

  • @julessharp
    @julessharp Před 5 lety +4

    Thanks for this video Rachael-the “subterranean caves” metaphor is great. And in the process of using this for my own writing, I thought of two alternative terms that relate to your metaphor: brain “mining” (instead of storming) and brain “panning” (as in gold panning, where you sift for bits of gold already on the surface). (I live in a town founded because of a gold rush, hence the terms.) Thanks again!

  • @FabianoGama
    @FabianoGama Před 4 lety

    I must say that this is one of the most important videos I've ever seen. Part of what you say I have already learnt from life, but not everything, not enough to unlock all of the creative power I feel that I have. I'm always navigating in the chaos of my ideas, manyof them come up from my subconcious, but it's always chaotic and I get overwhelmed and frustrated because I more frequently than not get lost and can't produce anything useful. Sometimes I can, but most of the times I can't. Now it's different. After I found this video and started to use this technique I started to produce a lot of things I didn't know I could. Thank you very much for that.

  • @MichelledeVriesAuthor
    @MichelledeVriesAuthor Před 6 lety +5

    Awesome video and super helpful! I think the 5 idea technique sounds to best to me as well :). I feel like I should show this video to all my classmates :') (I study communication & multimedia design and basically the gist of what we do is solve problems) we could spend days "brainstorming" and get literally nowhere because we don't really use a technique just 'brain dumping'.

  • @brittamai5367
    @brittamai5367 Před 4 lety

    I'm just found you and your videos. May you believe this? The magical at this is that your talk about ideas to write on, about digging after them and working with magic questions to do this, is right what I needed now. I feel this video so deep inside of my heart and brain, like a fresh morning with the first sun glimmering at the horizon! My dream since I can imagine ever was to write. And with the first months of this year I at least was capable to arrange all the life circumstances in a new way, to make this easier for me. But after an enthusiastic start (with a weekend writer workshop and all) now I'm sitting here since months and feel like bleeding out of the will to write. Because of a lack of ideas. And this makes me so sad. I will watch this video twice and make your advice a treasure. Thank you!

  • @mariahannagrundmann2942
    @mariahannagrundmann2942 Před 5 lety +10

    So I figured I'd start a "brain dump" (so sorry) for questions to ask yourself when you are just starting a novel, just because I am right now:
    What are themes I want to explore? Love, friendship, political views, religion, nature, womens rights, personal development, social structures...
    What is the general network of characters and their interactions? who does what with whom? (Think of your own surroundings and the relationships that influence you the most)
    Who has which development and personal problems?
    What is the problem of my story? A social/political structure to overcome? A war? A natural desaster? A personal problem? A relationship problem? A 'bad guy'?
    What is the main plot line? Where do side plots come in?
    How is my main character built up? Introvert/Extrovert? Intuitive/Ovservant? Emotional/Rational? Flaws? Strengths? character, history, and physical appearance...
    Feel free to add to this, I'd love to get some ideas from you all! Happy writing!

  • @Juicybeachgirls
    @Juicybeachgirls Před 3 lety

    Haha I like how you said that. “Hopefully that sold you on it.” 5:38
    ... and yes. Yes you did. 😊🙏🏼

  • @santanasg8445
    @santanasg8445 Před 6 lety +1

    Completely agree! It’s totally different and a completely different method a “brainstorm” and a “brain drop”- while both of them could be equally as useful, they’re meant for different purposes

  • @farflunghopes
    @farflunghopes Před 3 lety

    I've heard of the Holmes method as rubber ducking too! Talking to someone about a problem or a rubber duck if no one is around

  • @BiblioAtlas
    @BiblioAtlas Před 6 lety +3

    Great video! I do the same but simply call them custom prompts. I start every project with a huge blank paper & that beginning prompt or statement. Then I branch out into the various themes related to the original idea. 💞💞

  • @deerinthewoods
    @deerinthewoods Před 6 lety

    I've been stalling for SO LONG until recently when I decided to try and start writing by hand instead of typing down. Writing a draft by hand turned out no easier than typing it BUT I've discovered that brainstorming by hand actually helps, like, A LOT. When I try to solve problems in my story just in my head, my mind always wanders off, I do have problems with keeping attention, I guess... Writing my questions down, however, and trying to answer them also by writing helps me remain focused and thus helps with the story SO MUCH it really feels like magic.
    Thank you for giving us so many different brainstorming methods! I'd definitely try the 5 ideas method - it sounds like exactly the thing I need!

  • @kiwikea2002
    @kiwikea2002 Před 5 lety +2

    First - thanks for the awesome video. I only recently found your channel, but I am following up on the videos since they give thoughtful and deeper insights and perspectives on "the writing problem" (pun intended). Which brings me to one approach to brainstorming which I've found useful, too, and which might be of interest: Change your perspective.
    There are several easy and not so easy ways to do that. You can employ methods like "six thinking hats" or your personal version of that, employ perhaps consciously a perspective which is used by one of the characters in the book, if they are already mature enough. (This might even result in a "negative" idea - if the character in perspective expects something, you might just use the opposite to create a twist.) Or you can just stimulate your brain by changing circumstances. Easiest are: After a period of time, consciously change the color of your pen / ink when drawing up your brainstorm outputs / ideas. Change your body's position - movement stimulates the brain, a new sitting position does as well, and a new vista out of another window or looking at a different picture on the wall does so, too. Change the room if you have a number of working spaces scattered across your place for a different atmospheric / environmental trigger. But don't just loiter. :-) Make it a conscious change.
    My two cents. Thanks once more for your channel.

  • @kathleenmiller3360
    @kathleenmiller3360 Před 5 lety

    I've recently been hooked on a story line, and been tearing down walls in my head trying to figure out the story to it's full potential. I actually used a couple of your methods on my own, as they've been natural ones throughout all of my story ideas over the years. Thinking in my head about story lines is hazardous for me, because my brain jumps all over the place and I never stay focused on what I want. I have actually found that talking out loud to myself, forces my brain to stay on track and it helps immensely. I also talk out loud to my partner all the time, after I have talked to myself just to make sure that my ideas all make sense and flow in the correct direction. I loved your five method process, and the idea behind it, and outside of the story line I am working on now, have typically stuck to the first things that pop in my head, then get frustrated and quit when things get complicated and I don't have solutions. It's crazy how different my current project is though, I have had soooo many eureka's and haven't allowed myself to stop thinking about my characters and their goals/ambitions. I sometimes think back to my original idea (I've been stuck on this for about 2 months now trying to figure it out) and laugh, cuz I am so happy that I pushed my boundaries and went for other solutions, or even back tracked to the beginning to see what I could change to make my outcomes push into new territories that I liked better.
    Now, in the beginning when you were talking about brain dumping made me a bit worried. With the first part of my story completed in my brain, I took all of what I figured out and dumped the contents onto the page. I basically jotted everything down in order to remind myself of things for when I actually begin to write the story. Is this what you were talking about at the beginning of your video? Because I have been brainstorming, and then writing down in quick synopsis the ideas in my head.. then I will go further to make chapter outlines, then write the story line itself. Does this method seem correct/constructive? I guess what I am asking is... can brainstorming turn into brain dumping? Or is what I am doing not at all brain dumping and I totally misunderstood your definition?

  • @WriterMarkusRegius
    @WriterMarkusRegius Před 6 lety +1

    Good tips! I've usually done free writing or discussing with someone else, but I'm curious to try the first one, because I've heard before that it's good, but I've never tried it for real! :)

  • @videosandarticlesworkgroup5073

    we understand Braindump is getting everything out that is in the brain. Brainstorming is getting everything > into < the brain that yet is only in the subconsciousness. (ryan at Vids&Articles )

  • @Juicybeachgirls
    @Juicybeachgirls Před 3 lety

    Lol 14:55
    I forget that you tubers are talking by themselves in their rooms. You act so natural, so I figure you’re talking to me 😆 so that means you’re good at what you do

  • @nutshell93
    @nutshell93 Před 6 lety +3

    This is a great video thanks for this ! I agree I don’t think people talk about this part of the process enough !

  • @julie_plays
    @julie_plays Před 6 lety +3

    i love brainstorming but i'll still be revisiting this video for the helpful tips! :)

  • @geoffreybarss273
    @geoffreybarss273 Před 6 lety +2

    This sometimes works for me: I write down my idea, which typically feels a little vague, and pick out the words that feel key but maybe not perfectly on target. Then I go to the Thesaurus and look them up. Using a traditional Roget's Thesaurus will usually work better than a dictionary thesaurus, and differently--not necessarily better or worse--than using a Thesaurus app on your computer. Sometimes you clarify your original idea and sometimes you generate an entirely new idea.
    I find this works when I'm trying to refine my themes or explain motivations. I guess this works for me because my first inspirations tend to be fuzzy. Try this out with a big meaty concept like "revenge" and you will find different intensities and varieties of meaning. Which one draws you?
    Another thing I try though not so often, is entering key words into Google Image Search. Sometimes it helps to limit the search to black and white or a certain size or to line drawing because you will get a firehose blast of mostly useless stuff. But sometimes you find something that feels oddly appropriate though entirely unexpected.

  • @TheDanielbarboza
    @TheDanielbarboza Před 5 lety +7

    Getting a little drunk also helps. :)

    • @RachaelStephen
      @RachaelStephen  Před 5 lety +3

      I’ve yet to test this for brainstorming but I’m interested 😂 have you tried it?

    • @TheDanielbarboza
      @TheDanielbarboza Před 5 lety +3

      Sure I did! I'm not much of a drinker, so 3 beers already gets my subconscious more colaborative... LOL

    • @TroyGrey
      @TroyGrey Před 4 lety +2

      It does actually help. Often those nights when I’m thinking about writing the next chapter and feel stuck, after a couple of drinks I all of a sudden start making notes and start think behind borders.

    • @vtheb1299
      @vtheb1299 Před 4 lety

      Pot is waaaaay better for creativity than alcohol. As well as for the carpal tunnel syndrome that usually accompanies it. All this without destroying your liver and brain, disturbing your sleep, or leadingto addiction.

  • @rachaelmarie3194
    @rachaelmarie3194 Před 6 lety +9

    Amazing Brain storming ideas, I have big problems unpicking large complex issues. I'm currently struggling with the notion that I think I've over complicated my book. I like the fact it's not cookie cutter YA fantasy... It's an adult / new adult fantasy. But I am worried it's too complex.

    • @stiankallhovd7041
      @stiankallhovd7041 Před 6 lety +1

      Rachael Marie Know the feeling! Perhaps you could make an attempt to understand what story elements are required for the characters to reach their goals? Then, if something has to be cut, you'll still keep what's essential to connecting the beginning and the ending of your story. Hang in there! Good luck :)

    • @rachaelmarie3194
      @rachaelmarie3194 Před 6 lety

      Thanks Stain... Its just hard cutting our Characters I love so much.

  • @Juicybeachgirls
    @Juicybeachgirls Před 3 lety

    How do you pose a magic question for a book idea? How do I select a book idea? A plot line? I’m trying to write children’s books

  • @sarawawa8984
    @sarawawa8984 Před 5 lety

    Thank you so much for making all these videos! Currently going through all the preptober stuff (and I just started your seven-day course on how to plot and I'm super excited!)

  • @carolinaaloisio7158
    @carolinaaloisio7158 Před 4 lety

    I'm started my first novel this week and with your video I just realized that I first did brain dump, but then continue with a difused brain storm... I was inducing my brain for ideas but the magic question wasn't so clear... I will keep it in mind. Thank you!

  • @antenna_prolly
    @antenna_prolly Před 3 lety

    When you said "microwave" I literally just started hitting microwave buttons

  • @sabatheus
    @sabatheus Před 6 lety +5

    4:49 "How many metaphors do I HAVE in this video?!" lol

  • @saiyuriinuzuka6400
    @saiyuriinuzuka6400 Před 5 lety +1

    Maybe I missed it, but if not, can you do a video on refilling the creative well? This is currently where I am. I have so many ideas, but none are finished, and I want to start a new project but feel like I'm regurgitating other synopsies when I get an "idea."

  • @orlandosilverwolf4449
    @orlandosilverwolf4449 Před 4 lety +1

    Excellent Really helpful 👍🏼👍🏼

  • @kathyf3656
    @kathyf3656 Před 4 lety

    Great video. For me, brainstorming comes at night, when I relax. I think about my story, a scene, or some dialog and I go over it again and again. Then in the morning, I sit at the computer and start typing what I remember of that thinking time....and I always get surprised. New ideas pop up as I type. One idea morphs into another. A bit of dialog triggers a new line of thought. And when I get sidetracked, or run off on another tangent, I let it happens, because so many times these tangents from my subconscious create links I hadn't thought about before or set up foreshadowing ideas that turn out to be perfect for the story even though I hadn't planned on them. For example, I had a character say (unplanned in my general outline) that they weren't good with numbers, so they had an accountant to do their books and payroll. As I wrote that down, I wondered who was the accountant. That led to a string ideas of the accountant finding her boss dead and eventually being charged, and asking the (cozy mystery) heroine to help her clear herself. I ended up pushing the idea and wrote 10 pages of a plot for a later book in the series....all because of one statement. Isn't your subconscious a writer's best friend? Yeah! LOL

  • @avikesarwani5475
    @avikesarwani5475 Před 3 lety

    How to reach the magic question?

  • @ditsycitykitty3841
    @ditsycitykitty3841 Před 5 lety +2

    Did I not watch this vid yet? Eek! Oops. Well, here I am and loving it. I need to watch more of your backlog vids soon.
    Now I'm thinking I need to draw trees whenever I brainstorm, lol. But, maybe could possibly help me, cuz I sometimes go overboard on brainstorming. One particular story idea I have has 4 possible alternate story lines (some with the same scenes, others vastly different) but mostly similar plots. So, I can't write them all when I get to the drafting phase. But, I'm having a hard time deciding which one I want to go with. Maybe seeing them attached to large tree branches will help me choose which one to go with. lol. Idk. That story's been irking me for ~2.5 years now and I think it'll be one of those I'll struggle with for years to come. :S It's bottom of the list with which stories to focus on first, so I'm not freaking out about it, yet. :3
    On a related note, I've tried mind-mapping some of my stories on the computer and it seems to create such a huge mess. So, maybe drawing trees will look cleaner. And pretty, lol. I also do prefer to outline on paper vs computer. :)

  • @stiankallhovd7041
    @stiankallhovd7041 Před 6 lety

    By the way, Rachael, another purpose of the magic question, besides getting the most interesting types of ideas, is that narrowing down your research allows you to more easily have ideas in the first place! I know from my academic background how much it helps the process to ask specific research questions, and I'm certain this applies to fiction as well. So by asking magic questions (1) we'll have an easier time getting ideas, and (2) we'll get better ideas. Well done, Rachael! :)

  • @ElvannReacts
    @ElvannReacts Před 6 lety

    What usually works the best for me is mix between the 5 ideas method, clustering, bouncing and the stream of consciousness all at once. That's a lot but hold on, I'll try to explain a bit further how it works for me.
    As I am mostly creating music things, this might apply differently, but I've realized that the best solutions come to me with bouncing problems around with someone, but when it comes to creating things, I don't always get to have a partner wiling to listen to me bounce off ideas forever. So instead, when I'm trying to get lyrics written, for instance, I open myself an Evernote workfile and start writing a stream of consciousness directed toward my problem, but I write it sort of in the same format as if I was messaging somebody else about it. From there, I'll usually go in two directions: 1- I'll start writing down some words, phrases or concepts that inspired me in lists - a little similar to the cluster method 2- I'll start from a general form and try to iterate my way down to details (i.e I decide what I'll be singing about in different parts of the songs verses/chorus/bridge)
    And basically, I'll keep iterating over and over, creating various versions of each section until I get to a point I feel satisfied with. But the key most important thing for me is I don't shy away from keeping EVERY single step of the process in that document. I am not allowed to erase anything from it, and I'll throw all the thoughts that come to my mind there. I'm only allowed to strike the stuff I don't think I'll be using for the final version.
    So I iterate my way down to a full song like that until I'm satisfied with the result, and it works every single time for me.

    • @ElvannReacts
      @ElvannReacts Před 6 lety +1

      Also, that was a really great video, I always agree so much on what you say and your ideas on creativity. These videos are such inspiration and resources for new creators and I love to keep your structures in mind when I teach about songwriting or any other creative things as these tricks definitely do not apply only to writing but to creativity in general. Understanding how creativity and the mind work together is such a precious thing to learn.

  • @adamhenrysears3288
    @adamhenrysears3288 Před 4 lety

    Hi Rachael, these are some good ideas, should I ever need them. I'm definitely going to keep this in one of my tabs.
    Personally, I have never done a brainstorming session. I have always been a creator, since I was a child, and have never really found myself needing to think my way out of, or through, any written corners. On the other hand, I have always had my critical thinking brain turned to the on position, so, maybe that's the reason.
    I am about 75% plotter, 25% pantser. I tend to outline, but leave just enough room for my imagination to take tangents if necessary while writing.

  • @melvinclarke2904
    @melvinclarke2904 Před 6 lety

    thanks I believe I will try this method...I had not thought of it before they way you described it lol ill put my wine away.

  • @suryasufie90
    @suryasufie90 Před 3 lety

    great. I'm your new sub. good news, I'm a writer too.

  • @BrianaMorganBooks
    @BrianaMorganBooks Před 6 lety

    As a small authortuber I’ve been looking for some other authortubers to subscribe to. Love this video! I’m subscribed!

  • @Mcourtney4444
    @Mcourtney4444 Před 3 lety

    Excellent!

  • @brendawilliams7145
    @brendawilliams7145 Před 4 lety

    I'm so glad I found this topic and you did a swell presentation, thank you

  • @AlyxBowen
    @AlyxBowen Před 5 lety

    The metaphors are quite helpful. Thank you!

  • @bomberoggranater
    @bomberoggranater Před 6 lety

    The Holmes method is definitely the one that works best for me, but it can be a little embarassing starting the conversation xP

  • @sarawawa8984
    @sarawawa8984 Před 5 lety

    I'll admit I've kind of always pushed brainstorming to the side. I thought brainstorming was just for coming up with ideas, I'd never considered it as a problem-solving technique. Time to give brainstorming a real chance.

  • @rodnewsom6995
    @rodnewsom6995 Před 5 lety

    You are not just smart: you, my friend, are scary smart. I'm in awe. And I will confess to talking to myself; people who know me think I'm weird anyway! I have a twenty minute commute to work and from the moment I back away from home I begin brainstorming. Hearing the words forces me to focus. Otherwise my boybrain gets distracted!

  • @thesamuraiman
    @thesamuraiman Před 4 lety

    My favorite method is the verbal Holmes method. I've been doing it for years, before realizing it technically is a brainstorming method.

  • @theblackflamingo777
    @theblackflamingo777 Před 6 lety

    This is a reminder of why you should wait until the end of a video to comment things...
    I suggested Freewriting as an alternative to the term "Brain Dump" because to me, they're basically the same thing. You sit down and write as much as you can about a topic in an attempt to empty your brain. Sometimes you focus on something specific, sometimes you chase the train of your thoughts, sometimes you just write whatever comes out of your fingers.
    Another alternative is a thought bowl. While "brain dumping" I always imagine sticking a spout to the side of my head and draining out all the excess thoughts from my brain into a bowl that can hold them. The bowl being a piece of paper or an empty word document, in this case.

    • @RachaelStephen
      @RachaelStephen  Před 6 lety +1

      I love the phrase thought bowl! Maybe I’ll start using that :)

  • @melodid5023
    @melodid5023 Před 5 lety

    I do the talking to myself thing XD every day when I'm in the car and driving to work... and I love that. It's so great and helpful. I just am stuck right now with one question and it is killing me.

  • @Zallerquad
    @Zallerquad Před 6 lety +1

    My method is odd. I get a general direction of the story and a few points to hit and an ending and just write everything that happens in one sentence. One sentence per scene, and just write down whatever feels right that should happen next. Its worked for me in the past. You tend to get a few extraneous scenes but some judicious editing fixes that and then you use the sentences as a guide for what scene is next and what happens in it. Its a kind of "pants like" outline.

  • @heather-linbrannon8352

    This is incredible!

  • @anne-mareegray8762
    @anne-mareegray8762 Před 6 lety

    thanks Rachael. Lots of good ideas here.

  • @simeondawkins5671
    @simeondawkins5671 Před 3 lety

    OMG i have a saying i wanna use words like lego blocks :) :) :)

  • @gusolive
    @gusolive Před 5 lety

    very good - as anthony robbins says - the answer is in the question!

  • @stiankallhovd7041
    @stiankallhovd7041 Před 6 lety

    Wonderful video! You're really touching on something important with the concept of magic questions. :)
    I have a challenge for you... How do you know that a suitable answer to a magic question exists? OR: How would it be possible to prove the answer doesn't exist?
    I ask this due to my personal experience... I completed an outline about a year and a half ago. However, the outline was very vague, and I understood that the plot I had on paper would only work as a trilogy, meaning that I would have to spread the plot points across three films. (I write screenplays instead of novels.)
    Since the time I completed this outline, I have struggled to find individual stories for each film, on which "the greater plot" of the series can advance. It was only until very recently I completed an outline for the first screenplay, with more or less every scene described. I have also come some way with the second film, and hope to flesh out this outline till I am confident it can work as a blueprint for an engaging story. And of course, I need to complete the outline for the third screenplay too before I'm confident that the greater plot I planned initially can actually be delivered in a way that keeps the audience emotionally engaged.
    So, to formulate some new questions relating to my own situation: How do I know there exist magic questions for the individual screenplays that I intend (hope) to write? How do I know that the greater story I desire to tell can actually be told in a way that makes sense and is engaging to the audience? Did I perhaps stumple upon a story idea that just isn't possible to tell with respect to the principles of good storytelling (3-act structure, and so on)?
    Thanks for making high quality videos! :)
    Stian

    • @CareyReeve
      @CareyReeve Před 6 lety +1

      #1 This is actually a challenge for you, yourself. You can only know whether or not an answer exists by crafting the question and having a solid go at answering it. If you don't get an answer that helps, refine the question or scrap it and craft a new question. (Aside: it's not possible to prove a negative. Just not.)
      #2 Have you tried Rachel's "How to Plot on One Page" series? That might help you to get past the limitations of the old-fashioned "principles."
      #3 The other thing that might help is the realization that all of the magic questions exist as soon as you create them. You have to actively manipulate them into existence. You know that it exists because you are in complete control of its birth.

  • @sunflowersoundsofficial4221

    I'm back. I come back to specific videos semi-periodically. I'm struggling with brainstorming in the sense that I can just keep going and exploring different threads and subthreads infinitely and never know how to nail down which ones to stick with. I can't get to my draft because I can't find good healthy endings to my brainstorming.

  • @spioradnaiseanta2318
    @spioradnaiseanta2318 Před 6 lety

    You make brainstorming look good 😆😉😜

  • @ghauswood9594
    @ghauswood9594 Před 4 lety

    Thx this helped me so much.

  • @sunflowersoundsofficial4221

    I know you've touched on it briefly before probably but how long do you work on an idea when you start to think it might be complete garbage before you decide if you're going to scrap it or not?
    Thanks so much for the new vid

    • @RachaelStephen
      @RachaelStephen  Před 6 lety +6

      No idea is complete garbage. If you are invested in it you can make it into something good, it’s just about if you’re prepared to do the work. Instead of asking ‘is this garbage?’ Ask ‘how much do I care about this?’

    • @sunflowersoundsofficial4221
      @sunflowersoundsofficial4221 Před 6 lety

      Solid and optimistic advice. I've invested a ton of brain power and effort into this project in particular, trunking countless stories and another novel-sized, possibly series -worthy concept with binders and documents worth of work done on it. But it's fantasy which isn't within my realm of comfort. Maybe I should stop looking at other ideas' asses when they walk by and focus on nurturing my relationship with this novel? Lmaooo

  • @johnc5258
    @johnc5258 Před 5 lety

    you seem to have a really good visual eye i wonder how you never got into interior design or fashion or landscape architecture or something

  • @oldmanridesomr1645
    @oldmanridesomr1645 Před 6 lety +2

    Shouldn't I be strapping tunnelling gear on? ;)

    • @RachaelStephen
      @RachaelStephen  Před 6 lety +2

      You are correct but climbing downwards is still climbing, right?

  • @PsiCorps85
    @PsiCorps85 Před 6 lety

    Are you an ENFP or ENTP? You said brainstorming is what you're best at, so that means Ne is probably your strongest function. Not sure if you value logical consistent(Ti) & social harmony(Fe) more or less than authencity(Fi) & problem solving(Te). Probably Fi&Te since you're talking about problem solving. So, likely you're an ENFP.

    • @RachaelStephen
      @RachaelStephen  Před 6 lety +1

      Actually in tests I get ENFJ but the E is a false positive because I’m a pretty socially confident introvert so I’m INFJ

  • @tombpunk
    @tombpunk Před 6 lety +1

    D.Va located!

  • @KekoaSkills
    @KekoaSkills Před 4 lety

    Field trip time, destination- The Akashic Records Museum

  • @morgantaylor7406
    @morgantaylor7406 Před 5 lety

    Do you have an Instagram or tumblr to follow?

  • @themunster9459
    @themunster9459 Před 5 lety

    Someone’s a D. VA main

  • @kivsa85
    @kivsa85 Před 5 lety +1

    So long to get to the point...
    Tiring

  • @amerah4587
    @amerah4587 Před 5 lety

    Sorry but you are REALLY bad at swearing..

    • @patrickdemets6018
      @patrickdemets6018 Před 5 lety

      Actually, I think Rachael is rather good at it. Just enough to get viewer's attention and to emphasize a point.

  • @blessyjeswin5826
    @blessyjeswin5826 Před 4 lety

    O wow 🤩 nice Not!🤣

  • @emmaroberts534
    @emmaroberts534 Před 4 lety

    I thought I was going to like this but she says a lot of bad words

    • @DianeAckley
      @DianeAckley Před 4 lety

      There are no 'bad' words. They're just words. We as humans picked out some that we consider to be bad. The words can't help that, though. They're just existing.

    • @adrithmanvik1853
      @adrithmanvik1853 Před 4 lety

      Grow up cant you handle a few swear words smh

  • @blessyjeswin5826
    @blessyjeswin5826 Před 4 lety

    Stop saying ****and****