Researching Future Projects
June 27, 2010
Image by incurable_hippie via Flickr
There are many ideas that probably hit you every day that you should jot down somewhere. Perhaps someone says something that tickles you or you suddenly get a brilliant idea for a new story. Write it down immediately! It might just be the start of researching a future project.
I recently purchased a little black notebook, where I keep ideas for haiku. Ideas hit me without warning and if I don’t write them down, I might lose that little snippet. Even if is just a line, the way something strikes me, I write it down.
One example recently was watching children play on an abandoned boat on the beach. It turned into this haiku:
children giggle
inside an abandoned boat –
hermit crabs
If you have that kernel of an idea, go ahead and open a Word doc now and start putting research information about it into that file. It will help you create a future project.
I did this with one story. All I had was the basic concept: mushrooms take over the world. Then I started researching a bit about mushrooms, here and there, bit by bit. Then as time went on, I’d come up with other ideas and stick them in that file.
When I sat down to write the story it didn’t take long. I had done all my research and was prepared.
You can read that story here.
If you have any old ideas that are sitting there, untapped in your mind right now, start a new file on your computer. Write those ideas down (don’t worry about editing), just get them out of your mind and onto a page. Download all those old ideas and see if you are inspired to write a new story today.





I take both hi-tech and low-tech approaches to this, and have for a while: I carry a backpack full of scraps of notes, actually most of my literature-grade ideas are in a 3-ring binder (I seem to have amassed a forest of notebook paper in it).
When I have an idea, for some reason, the ether of the internet sucks my ideas away like the the whirlwind and Dorothy.
When I actually commit them to paper, they stick. With the digital ideas, I keep them filed neatly into folders, and will name them according to the current project (mostly website and monetization ideas, or projects I’m working on for clients).
I usually get to those quickly, otherwise I tend to delete them.
When I write these ideas down, I tell my children, “Guess what daddy’s printing? Money.” They used to laugh, now not so much. (They know I’m not kidding!)
comment by James H — July 17, 2010 @ 12:29 am