For Memorial Day, I thought I'd continue our "how to" theme and share ideas for thanking our servicemen and women. After all, we owe them a debt we can never repay.
1. Write to them. Send an email to a serviceperson. Go to http://www.anysoldier.com/WhereToSend/
2. Get involved and send a serviceperson a care package. Go to http://www.soldiersangels.org/ For a list of organizations with projects to support servicemen and servicewomen and their families.
3. Fly the flag on Memorial Day. You never know when a veteran will pass by and notice!
4. Say a prayer on Memorial Day. Remember the fallen, pray for those who serve and for their families. Pray for our leaders that they make good decisions.
5. Scrapbook a page honoring a serviceperson. Journal about how proud you are. Here's a terrific free journaling box http://freescrapbookingsupplies.blogspot.com/
6. Contact your local USO. I'm wondering if they'd like some of the books I'm weeding out from my bookshelves? I'll find out! http://uso.org/contacttheuso/
7. Wear an American flag on your clothing. It's a small way to say, "I am proud of my country."
8. Vote. Don't let them sacrifice for naught. Be a good citizen and do your part to protect the freedoms our servicepeople have fought and died for.
9. Visit a veteran's grave. Even if you simply stand there for a moment of quiet reflection, you're honoring their service--and you're rededicating yourself to the freedoms we enjoy as a citizen of this country.
Showing posts with label journaling prompts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label journaling prompts. Show all posts
Sunday, May 24, 2009
Monday, December 29, 2008
2008 Was the Year That I...
For years now, I've been using sentence stems to encourage scrapbookers to write--and I call these "journaling prompts." On the face of it, a journaling prompt is a simple idea. It's a sentence intentionally left unfinished so that the reader will "fill in the blank." In interviewing, the prompt would be called an "open ended question."
I'm now posting journaling prompts almost daily on Twitter. Go to www.twitter.com/joannaslan and sign up to "follow me" if you'd like to see the prompts as I create them. My goal is to encourage my "followers" to write more words, more often, on more topics.
If you are a scrapbooker, you can use these prompts to suggest layout ideas and journaling. But you don't have to be a scrapbooker to find value in journaling prompts. If you are an author, you might let the prompts suggest a scene to you. Or you might answer a prompt from the Point of View of different characters in order to know them a little better.
If you are someone who'd like to be more diligent in your personal journaling, a prompt can help you explore new ideas. If you are a teacher, you can use the prompts as classroom assignments to get your students writing.
I suggest you aim for a minimum of at least ten short responses to any given journaling prompt. This will force you to go past the superficial and to tap into new reservoirs of creativity. To get to twenty responses, you'll need to push yourself, but the break-through is worthwhile. It's here that you find answers that both surprise and reveal. Once you've jotted down the answers quickly, pause and reflect. Which answer holds the most interesting potential? Which one was the least expected? Which one makes you uncomfortable? Which one begs an explanation? For a bit more of a challenge, choose one answer and elaborate on it.
Here's an example of a journaling prompt in action: "2008 was the year that I..."
1. Said "goodbye" to my son as he entered college as a freshman.
2. Became a "grand-aunt" when Skyler was born.
3. Underwent major surgery.
4. Learned that anesthesiologists lie to patients about getting sick after surgery.
5. Felt my sisters' love when they flew here to care for me.
6. Fell in love with GPS.
7. Learned to Twitter.
8. Spent hours on Facebook reconnecting with old friends.
9. Joined the ranks of published mystery authors.
10. Got Jeff Deaver's cell phone number.
11. Realized how many "frenemies" I have.
12. Realized how many friends I have who live all over the world.
13. Drove from Eastern Tennessee to the middle of Kansas by myself and wondered if I was nuts.
14. Listened to wolves howling at a santuary.
15. Gained respect for how "in shape" I used to be after I became "out of shape" following surgery.
16. Held my first Virtual Book Signing.
17. Spent weekends in bookstores handselling Paper, Scissors, Death
18. Finished Book #3 in the Kiki Lowenstein Scrap-N-Craft Mystery series.
19. Mastered saying "Scrap-N-Craft" rather than the alternatives.
20. Decided cashmere is absolutely fabulous.
21. Got involved in the political process.
22. Swore off being an officer in any professional group ever again.
23. Thrilled to good reviews (after holding my breath as I read them).
24. Gave my first humorous keynote in years.
25. Fell in love with my husband all over again.
Why not try the prompt yourself and see where it leads you?
Happy New Year!
I'm now posting journaling prompts almost daily on Twitter. Go to www.twitter.com/joannaslan and sign up to "follow me" if you'd like to see the prompts as I create them. My goal is to encourage my "followers" to write more words, more often, on more topics.
If you are a scrapbooker, you can use these prompts to suggest layout ideas and journaling. But you don't have to be a scrapbooker to find value in journaling prompts. If you are an author, you might let the prompts suggest a scene to you. Or you might answer a prompt from the Point of View of different characters in order to know them a little better.
If you are someone who'd like to be more diligent in your personal journaling, a prompt can help you explore new ideas. If you are a teacher, you can use the prompts as classroom assignments to get your students writing.
I suggest you aim for a minimum of at least ten short responses to any given journaling prompt. This will force you to go past the superficial and to tap into new reservoirs of creativity. To get to twenty responses, you'll need to push yourself, but the break-through is worthwhile. It's here that you find answers that both surprise and reveal. Once you've jotted down the answers quickly, pause and reflect. Which answer holds the most interesting potential? Which one was the least expected? Which one makes you uncomfortable? Which one begs an explanation? For a bit more of a challenge, choose one answer and elaborate on it.
Here's an example of a journaling prompt in action: "2008 was the year that I..."
1. Said "goodbye" to my son as he entered college as a freshman.
2. Became a "grand-aunt" when Skyler was born.
3. Underwent major surgery.
4. Learned that anesthesiologists lie to patients about getting sick after surgery.
5. Felt my sisters' love when they flew here to care for me.
6. Fell in love with GPS.
7. Learned to Twitter.
8. Spent hours on Facebook reconnecting with old friends.
9. Joined the ranks of published mystery authors.
10. Got Jeff Deaver's cell phone number.
11. Realized how many "frenemies" I have.
12. Realized how many friends I have who live all over the world.
13. Drove from Eastern Tennessee to the middle of Kansas by myself and wondered if I was nuts.
14. Listened to wolves howling at a santuary.
15. Gained respect for how "in shape" I used to be after I became "out of shape" following surgery.
16. Held my first Virtual Book Signing.
17. Spent weekends in bookstores handselling Paper, Scissors, Death
18. Finished Book #3 in the Kiki Lowenstein Scrap-N-Craft Mystery series.
19. Mastered saying "Scrap-N-Craft" rather than the alternatives.
20. Decided cashmere is absolutely fabulous.
21. Got involved in the political process.
22. Swore off being an officer in any professional group ever again.
23. Thrilled to good reviews (after holding my breath as I read them).
24. Gave my first humorous keynote in years.
25. Fell in love with my husband all over again.
Why not try the prompt yourself and see where it leads you?
Happy New Year!
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