Blank sheets still make my brain fizz in the best way, and I have a tiny ritual I use to wring ideas out of
the fog. First, I do a furious 'idea dump' where I set a timer for twenty minutes and scribble anything: characters, settings, weird lines of dialogue, snippets of imagery, noises, smells. No judgment. After that comes the comb-through — I circle anything that feels emotionally charged or oddly specific. Those circled bits become seeds.
Next I play with constraints because constraints are weirdly energizing. I’ll pick a forced mash-up (a heist story in a floating city + a protagonist who can’t lie), or a limitation (only three POVs, or a single-location novel). Then I sketch three mini-scenes: the opening hook, the midpoint twist, and the ending image. If those scenes spark conflict and a character arc, I keep going. If not, I pivot.
I also steal like mad from everywhere: a line from '
the name of the wind', a mood from 'Spirited Away',
the power dynamics of a favorite TV episode. Research trips and playlists help me ground setting details — cooking videos for food, old diaries for voice. In the end, brainstorming is play plus pruning: generate wildly, then ruthlessly choose the pieces that refuse to leave your head. I usually end up with a handful of seeds I can’t wait to grow.