Getting Back Into the Routine

You know you’ve been off your game when you log in to make a new post and you’re shocked to see that it’s been almost three months since you’ve even visited your own site! I’ve taken breaks before, but never one that’s lasted quite this long or left me feeling this disorganized.

I’m really glad that the theme for this months NaBloPoMo is “routine” because it’s painfully obvious that I need one. Whether I can find 31 days worth of ideas on the topic or not, I can say that I will definitely be creating a routine for blogging every day. And since I have more than one blog to take care of and get whipped back into shape it’s something that’s long over due.

So, it’s the first day of the second half of the year, my playtime is definitely over, and it’s time to put the butt in the chair and write if I hope to meet even half the goals I’ve set for myself this year.

How’s your year going? Are you where you want to be after the first six months?

Week in Review

Okay, it’s reality check time. This post marks the end of two full weeks of daily posting for me. And it’s a lot harder than I thought it would be coming up with something original to say every day. So far I’ve avoided falling into the re-blogging trap of just talking about what other people are saying, although I may do some of that if I can ever get an hour or two to sit here and catch up on reading everyone else’s blogs.

Today, however, I seem to have hit a wall. My brain is still on overload trying to process everything I learned at the Masters Seminar this past week. I’ve started about a half dozen posts in the last hour and nothing is coming out right. So rather than bore you with drivel and the incoherent ramblings of the sleep-deprived, I’ll just give you a recap of last week’s posts in case you didn’t get a chance to read them earlier.

Sunday – More on Happiness
Monday – Five Tips for Breaking the Procrastination Habit
Tuesday – It’s Time to Stop Drooling and Start Doing
Wednesday – Ten Quickies for Stress Relief
Thursday – What’s Good in Your Life?
Friday – Five Ways To Re-Inspire Yourself
Saturday – Four Brainstorming Tips For When You Need an Idea

Please leave me a comment and let me know if you found these useful. I want to make sure that you’re getting what you need when you visit here, and that can only happen with your feedback. My mind-reading skills are really rusty, so I rely on and appreciate your comments.

Four Brainstorming Tips For When You Need an Idea

My brain is on overload today. I’ve spent the day doing one of two things — fighting through the Christmas shopping crowds, or listening to the amazing speakers at Ross Goldberg’s Marketing Masters Seminar. The seminar’s been great and I’ve got so many ideas from the speakers for products to create, articles to write, seminars to plan, and general improvements to make to my business. So today I have no shortage of ideas of what to create. But there are days that I do need come up with something, and I don’t have a room full of people to bounce ideas off of. I used to let those days really get me down, and I’d just not write anything and go for days without a fresh piece of content. And if you’ve seen any of my old sites you’ll know just how infrequently they got updated.

There are a few tips you can use to help jump start your creativity when you need to find something to write about. For me brainstorming pretty much involves a yellow legal pad and my favorite pen. Some people use software and follow a mind-mapping process, but I’m much more of a scribbler. (If you could see the draft of this article, you’d know what I mean.)

These are some of the things I do to brainstorm when I’m in need of an idea:

1. Write everything down. Turn off yoru inner critic and write down every single idea that pops into your head. Don’t discount anything at this point, no matter how far-fetched it seems.

2. Along the same lines and #1, write quickly and don’t stop to think about what you’re writing. I don’t know about you but when I’m in creative mode, I tend to write a lot faster because my hands need to keep up with my brain. If you can use a voice recorder to get your ideas out, that’s even better because we can speak much more quickly than we can write or type.

3. Let your thoughts flow. Let them wander where they will and you’ll notice that your thoughts flow into one another. One idea may spawn several more related ideas and you’ll end up with something you may never even have seen coming.

4. Once you’ve gone as far as you can, and you think there can’t possibly be even one idea left in your brain, then write for five more minutes. You might be surprised at what you come up with whn you stretch yourself just that little bit further.

Using these tips has never failed to produce at least one idea for an article or report for me. I hope that you can get some use out of them as well.

Leave me a comment and let me know what you think or how you brainstorm. I’d love to hear your thoughts.

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