Five Tips to Inspire Your Writing
- Taylor Wehri
- Jun 11, 2019
- 4 min read
Along with the warmer days of spring come wonderful writing conferences. And like springtime, they inspire, teach, and renew the writer in us. I’m still processing a load of new learning, and it’ll be months before I implement much of it. But I did walk away with a handful of conference tips and advice I put to use immediately.
#1. The Hemingway Editor (http://www.hemingwayapp.com/)
I tested the free online versionof this editing tool, and I liked it so much I splurged for the paid version at$20. When you land on the home page, you’ll see a short passage ofwriting, along with the Editor’s feedback. To use the tool for your ownwriting, delete what’s there and paste in your own.
I took a test drive with a roughdraft of a blog post I was working on. Here are my results for the five areasof writing the Hemingway Editor evaluates:
7adverbs, meeting the goal of 7 or fewer
Although the goal, based on wordcount, met the limit, I cut the adverbs. While I don’t agree 100% with StevenKing’s assertion that “the road to hell is paved with adverbs,” I do overusethem.
1use of passive voice, meeting the goal of 2 or fewer
No suggestion with this one otherthan to “use active voice.” Active voice isn’t always possible, and 1 waswithin the limit anyway. I didn’t change anything, but I see how useful identifyingpassive voice will be in longer pieces.
1phrase has a simpler alternative
The term, utilize, washighlighted for which I substituted use.
3sentences of 54 are hard to read
I agreed. I’d tried to do too muchin each of the three sentences. A college writing teacher often cautioned that“if readers can get lost in a sentence, they will.” Because we need to avoid makingour audience re-read to grasp our meaning. I rewrote them.
Like a good teacher, the editor won’tfix such sentences for you, but rather suggests shortening or splitting them.
1sentence of 54 is very hard to read
In other words, the sentence wasdense, complex, and meandering. And not at all logical. It was a “sentence”created during a free write and definitely needed fixing.
I like The Hemingway Editor for whatif offers for its price. I see it being helpful for blog posts written on thefly. It will speed up my own editing process. To be determined is how useful itwill be with a lengthy piece such as a book chapter.
#2. Coschedule https://coschedule.com/headline-analyzer
If you need a title analyzer, Coschedule rocks. When I tested the original title of last week’s blog post, “Reclaim the Joy Jesus Intends for Us,” I got this score:

After reading the analysis, along with a couple the site’s articles about power words and emotional headlines, I rewrote the title as “How to Reclaim the Joy Jesus Intends for Us.”
New Score:

I love this site. Along with providing rationalefor scores, the site also offers a list of 180 Power Words for WritingEmotional Headlines. Get this.
#3. A New Paradigm for Viewing Social Media
I used to view social media as a necessaryevil to get anywhere with writing. I disliked it because it seemed like self-promotion.But after a few classes on marketing and social media at the Blue RidgeMountains Christian Writing Conference (BRMCWC), I changed my mindset.
What if we viewed social media as a ministry opportunity? What if it’s part of the larger calling God has for us today. Think about it. We can reach far more of the lost in this arena than we can in our books and articles where our audience is also Christian.
This was the message I heard from several conference leaders, but no one is more convincing than Edie Melson, author and social media expert. For Edie, the purpose of social media is to “share truth, bring joy, make connections, and provide a service.” She practices this philosophy on her popular blog, The Write Conversation. Edie urges writers to follow a ratio of 5:1. For every five posts that do one of the above, writers get one share to mention our own writing. When we take the time to build relationships and show our audience we care for them, they are more likely to get excited about our good news.
#4. Before settling in to write, read a little something for inspiration.
Another instructor suggested reading passagesfrom favorite books before beginning to write. Reading good writing inspires usand sets the mood for our work. If you’re using setting as character, readpassages from books where this is done well. This advice is especially helpful ondays when you hit the wall and the words won’t come. Take a break and read alittle.
#5. You can’t fix a blank page.
In other words, keep themain thing the main thing. Writers must write. We can network on socialmedia until we burn blisters on our fingers. We can study the craft of writinguntil we’re able to lead a workshop. We can learn all about marketing orself-publishing. But none of it matters if we aren’t getting words on the paper.
This reminded me of a favorite quote by journalist Mignon McLaughlin:
“There’s only one person who needs a glass of water oftenerthan a small child tucked in for the night, and that’s a writer sitting down towrite.
My glass of water was any number of distractions available on thenet right at my fingertips. I taped this sentence at the top of my computerscreen to remind me what my writing priority must be.
Writing conferences guide our writing in many ways.They help us improve our craft, reveal new writing opportunities, provide motivation,and inspire us. Often, they offer what we need when we most need it.
What new learning have you garnered from writing conferences?




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