Seasons of Talk

How do you measure the conversations in a day?

Small talk at the grocery store? Debates at meetings? Brainstorming during lunch? Arguments in your own head?

How about the conversations where you listen more than talk? Or the ones you have on Twitter? Those where there is no talking going on at all?

I’ve never counted the number of conversations I have in a day. You? Yet we struggle at writing a blog or posting a thing on that social network.

If you listen to your day, you’ll never run out of things to write about.  Nobody suffers from Talker’s Block.

Start with one keystroke … and keep going …

Begin with a Single Keystroke

You’ll find things measure up just fine after awhile.

 

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Dialing 8 Project

  • http://bloggingtactics.com/ Linda Norris

    Yes that totally makes sense… we do not run out of things to say, well most of the time, the talk ebbs and flows so easily. Writing? Now that is another thing. Could it be a throw back from our ‘school writing’ days? You know where everything had to be right and proper… sentence structure, grammar, spelling and so on. No-one gave us talking rules, we just did it… but we had to obey the writing rules and I wonder if just that thought blocks our creativity.

    • http://www.converstations.com MikeSansone

      “…obey the writing rules and I wonder if just that thought blocks our creativity”

      Hammer, meet Nail:-)  The writing rules are changing, because reading habits are changing. Even if we don’t see our online content as “conversations” we’ll get better if we write to our readers “conversationally”, hmm?

      I really like how your addition here is written in a conversational flow … pauses, questions, perfect (ish) .  thanks, Linda :-)

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