Sunday, 24 October 2010

7 Tips for Keeping a Writer's Dream Diary

As part of our NaNoWriMo preparations, we (the family writing group) are keeping diaries of our dreams. You have to be quick writing them down because dreams disappear quickly upon waking. Hmm, I wonder why that is - do you know? I'm sure there will be a fascinating scientific reason we don't keep those memories handy.

 
The idea is we can take the abstract dream ideas and brainstorm story plots. Do you record dreams? Here's some tips:
  1. Make sure your paper and pen are right by your bedside, chances are you won't bother getting up in the night to find them.
  2. If you can't see well enough to write immediately (my eyes are blurry for about an hour after waking), you can say the dream out loud to help solidify the memory.
  3. Think about your WIP as you drift off to sleep. Talk to your characters, this might help you dream about them.
  4. Don't try to write a sensible narrative of your dream, just scrible images and interactions as you remember them. They don't have to make sense, you can use them as writing prompts later.
  5. Meditate before sleep to promote vivid dreams. I've posted about hypnosis for writing before in Stories from the Subconscious I use a hypnosis recording on my iPhone. You can also learn self-hypnosis. Try iTunes for plenty of free hypnosis podcasts.
  6. Fall asleep listening to an audio book. I do this accidently sometimes and it always prompts weird dreams.
  7. Reading fiction right before bed can get your brain in an imaginative mood.
Here's some recordings that I use:

Do you have any tips on encouraging vivid dreams?

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