Wednesday: Where do you get your ideas? Want mine?

I often swear the universe works in synergistic ways. The less-fancy*schmansy way to say that is that more and more frequently, I find that things I’m thinking of or dealing with are issues in the lives of others.

I won’t give elaborate descriptions (not yet anyway…lol) but here’s a simple one: I’ve spent the last several days, actually–most of the last week–thinking about the quandry I have with excessive ideas for articles, stories and novels. I hate wasting things. Maybe it comes from the creative thought that something I don’t want can be used by someone else (I’m trying desperately to avoid the “one chick’s trash is another chick’s treasure” thing), or because, growing up, mom always lectured us on not wasting things. (She’s a wise one, that mom of mine).

My problem is, and I suspect is the case with many other writers of all genres, once our brains are trained to think about our every day lives in terms of “how can I use this in an article?”, we get ideas in spurts. Over the last month or so, I have literally filled my (newly wallpapered) walls with clips, thoughts, quotes, interviews, op-eds and insights that I know have article potential somewhere, but the real fact is that I won’t get to 98% of these. And it’s sad. I hate waste, when another author somewhere needs ideas and I’m hording them like my sister horded her Halloween candy (yes, Mush, I know–top left dresser drawer. You had to know I snitched it!)

Anyway, I digress.

I’ve been worried about wanting to share ideas with other writers, so when I read Beth’s post (gotta love that name) today at her Hell or High Water blog, Inspiration is Perspiration, I couldn’t help but remember my nagging problem. (Back to the synergy point I tried to make too many paragraphs ago).

What do you writers think about this topic of ideas? See, in my creative, no-limits brain, I see a giant online corkboard where folks can stop by and thumbtack those ideas they just know they won’t use for others to stop by and swipe. And despite what the conspiracy-theorist writers say, even if two people pick the same topic, there’ll write two different articles (the “p” word, plagiarism, excluded).

What do you think about a corkboard? Would you use it? Would it be helpful? I just hate all these great ideas going to waste. I know somewhere, someplace, there’s a writer who has a need for an idea I don’t have time for. Maybe it’s you?!

1 comments on Wednesday: Where do you get your ideas? Want mine?

  1. Beth
    May 22, 2008 at 2:11 PM

    I totally believe in the karma of freelancing. If I don’t have time for it, someone else will. If I don’t have interest in it, someone else will. If I don’t have necessary expertise, someone else will. And when they don’t have these things, I will! :)

It's pretty simple, really. I'm a writer who loves writing about writing, and sharing all the tricks of the trade with other writers. And when I'm not writing, I'm thinking about writing. I have a hunch you know what I mean :) Read More