Nicole Bianchi

Writing, Copywriting, & Marketing Strategies

  • Home
  • About
  • Stories & Essays
  • Blog
  • Courses
  • Contact

How to Spark Inspiration with a Powerful Writing Ritual

Published May 22, 2016 | Last Updated May 21, 2020 By Nicole Bianchi 35 Comments

Pen resting on top of journal covered in handwriting

A story idea suddenly appears in your head with a complete beginning, middle, and end. You sit down to write, and the words flow freely. It’s as if the story is typing itself.

How often do you experience that kind of burst of incredible inspiration?

I’m guessing that probably doesn’t happen to you very often. (If it does, I am incredibly envious of your superpower.)

However, for the majority of us writers, the Muse is more like a grouchy hibernating bear who refuses to leave its cave. If we wait for her to drop in on us before we start writing, we probably would only end up with a handful of words every year.

In Jack London’s 1905 essay on how to become a published writer, he wisely observed, “Don’t loaf and invite inspiration; light out after it with a club, and if you don’t get it you will nonetheless get something that looks remarkably like it.”

London believed that writing daily was the best way to rouse the sleeping Muse. He advised in his essay, “Set yourself a ‘stint,’ and see that you do that ‘stint’ each day; you will have more words to your credit at the end of the year.”

However, implementing a daily writing habit is hard work, and even when we show up at the computer, the words might still refuse to come.

We need a way to lure the Muse out of the cave, and one of the best ways to do that is with a writing ritual. Read on to discover how several famous writers used writing rituals to spark inspiration and how you too can design a powerful writing ritual to achieve your daily writing goals. [Read more…]

Filed Under: creativity, inspiration, productivity, writing

Want to Become a Better Writer? Go For a Walk

Published May 8, 2016 | Last Updated November 14, 2020 By Nicole Bianchi 39 Comments

Person walking on top of fallen tree on a forest trail

If you’re like most writers, you probably spend a big part of your day seated at your desk in front of a computer.

There are stories and blog posts to write, comments to reply to, emails to send, Facebook pages and Instagram accounts to update, articles to Tweet, and the list goes on. If we’re not careful, we can easily fall into the trap of staring at a computer screen for hours.

And that’s not only detrimental to our health but also detrimental to our creativity.

Science fiction writer Orson Scott Card observes, “Take care of your body. Writing is a sedentary business; it’s easy for many of us to get fat and sluggish. Your brain is attached to the rest of your body. You can’t do your best work when you’re weak or in ill health.”

Card’s solution? A daily walk. He writes, “It’s worth the time to take an hour’s walk before writing. You may write a bit less for the time spent, but you may find that you write better.”

Card isn’t the only writer who lauded the benefits of walking. Read on to discover several of the famous writers who were also walkers and how a daily walk can boost your creativity.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: creativity, productivity, writing

Why It‘s Okay to Be Afraid: John Steinbeck on Confronting Your Writing Fears

Published April 25, 2016 | Last Updated May 21, 2020 By Nicole Bianchi 31 Comments

Photo of John Steinbeck reclining in a chair in front of a window
John Steinbeck, by Peter Stackpole, via Life

Do you struggle with fear as a writer?

Fear that your writing isn’t good enough? That people will criticize what you write? That you’ll write one good story and then never be able to write anything else?

Fears like these can feel overwhelming and make you think that maybe you should just give up on writing. It’s easy to imagine that the greatest writers confidently showed up each day at their typewriters, words flowing effortlessly from their fingers.

But that’s not true. Even the greatest writers are not immune to fear and self-doubt.

Nobel laureate John Steinbeck was one famous writer who wrestled with insecurity and severe anxiety throughout his entire writing career. But he didn’t let those fears defeat him.

Read on to discover his invaluable advice for how to confront your writing fears.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: creativity, inspiration, motivation, writing

5 Rules for Writing Well: C. S. Lewis’s Letter to a Young Writer

Published April 16, 2016 | Last Updated May 21, 2020 By Nicole Bianchi 54 Comments

C. S. Lewis's book on top of a blanket with glasses resting on top of it
Photo by Caleb Woods on Unsplash

Do you have any favorite authors whose work you rave about to anyone who will listen?

You’ve read all of their books and may have even tried to imitate their style. Wouldn’t you love it if you could converse with them and get their feedback on how you could improve your writing?

In 1956, C. S. Lewis did just that for a young fan.

The British author of the beloved Chronicles of Narnia series received countless letters from children all around the world. He was careful to respond to each one. A collection of some of these responses can be found in the slim volume Letters to Children.

Among them are several of his letters to Joan, a young girl who wrote to him from the United States. She sent her first letter to Lewis in 1954. They would end up exchanging over twenty letters.

In one letter, Lewis outlined for Joan his five rules for writing well. Though the letter is now sixty years old, Lewis’s rules are still relevant for writers today.

Read on to discover C. S. Lewis’s five rules and how we can use them to improve our own writing.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: creativity, inspiration, writing

How to Use Benjamin Franklin’s Daily Schedule to Reach Your Writing Goals

Published April 9, 2016 | Last Updated May 21, 2020 By Nicole Bianchi 37 Comments

Painting of Benjamin Franklin reading a stack of papers

Let’s face it. It’s easy to set resolutions and draw up a list of goals for our writing projects, but it’s much more difficult putting in the hard work to achieve them.

At first you might make significant progress towards your goals, but as the weeks pass, your schedule seems to become busier than you expected, your motivation begins to ebb, and those goals begin to look further and further out of reach.

How do you maintain that original interest and energy that motivated you during those initial stages? How do you ensure that you are working productively each day?

Here’s Benjamin Franklin’s solution to this problem: a simple daily schedule that can help you establish an effective writing routine and reach your writing goals.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: inspiration, productivity, writing

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 17
  • 18
  • 19
  • 20
  • 21
  • 22
  • Next Page »

Hi, I’m Nicole! I help creatives, business owners, and writers take their writing and copywriting to the next level and grow their online audience. I’m also a published writer of essays and short stories. As a Christian, I seek to follow in the tradition of artists like Johann Sebastian Bach, dedicating all my work Soli Deo gloria.
Find out more about me here.
•••
“My heart is stirred by a noble theme as I recite my verses for the king; my tongue is the pen of a skillful writer.”
– Psalm 45:1

___________________

AS SEEN ON:

Follow Me on Facebook

Let’s Connect!

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Medium
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Amazon Associates Disclosure

Nicole Bianchi is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.

Copyright © 2022 Nicole Bianchi Creative LLC · All Rights Reserved · Privacy Policy · Psalm 45:1