Top Five
1. Don’t think, just write—look back later and gather ideas from there. Our best potential is hidden deep within the unconscious recesses of our minds.
2. Write everything that comes.
3. Keep a dictionary and thesaurus nearby. Every word carries a slightly different meaning, flavor, tone, and it’s crucial to piece together the right ones to convey our image.
4. Read hard books. Exposure to hard, eloquent writing with hard, eloquent words teaches our minds to think naturally on that higher and more difficult level.
5. When faced with a serious bout of writer’s block, look around you for inspiration. Everything has a life, a history, something that makes it
uniquely it. Ponder that.
Unanimous
The best writing advice I've heard from multiple authors, teachers, and lovers of art- write unapologetically. Write from the heart, stories that are true enough to feel but false enough to make you dream, the things that would cause a ruckus at the family reunion...that is the kind of writing that moves the soul. The kind of writing that people dissect for decades, that people know how it makes them feel yet they can never really put it into words...
Alan Watts speaks to me from the grave
"Write like you’re a goddamn death row inmate and the governor is out of the country and there’s no chance for a pardon. Write like you’re clinging to the edge of a cliff, white knuckles, on your last breath, and you’ve got just one last thing to say, like you’re a bird flying over us and you can see everything, and please, for God’s sake, tell us something that will save us from ourselves. Take a deep breath and tell us your deepest, darkest secret, so we can wipe our brow and know that we’re not alone."
Enough said.
To me from me
I have never been a fan of advices, though I have found some and they often are contradictory. I believe that is fundamental to listen to your inner voice, which is hindred by your overreactive mind.
So my advice would be to be couragoeus and just do something, try, experiment, which is a very difficult endeavour facilitated by turning off the critical thinking, at least whilst in the middle of writing, as opposed to outlininig, and focusing on the moment. It also helps to remember that you enjoy what you are doing and play the game for the sake of the game, so to speak, without goals and expectations. All of which is more easily said that done, no doubts about it.
Keep It Moving
I was privileged to know the late, great Southern writer, Walker Percy ("The Movie Goer," "Love in the Ruins," etc.). (https://www.nytimes.com/1990/05/11/obituaries/walker-percy-is-dead-at-74-a-novelist-of-the-new-south.html)
He read my first novel and although he enjoyed several parts, his main criticism was that many included elements, while entertaining in their own right, did nothing to "move" the novel or the story.
I've used this advice ever since to discard sections that didn't really contribute to the novel as a novel or the story standing on its own. The advice: get rid of the stuff that doesn't move the story. It's amazing how much there is that can be discarded for the betterment of the work. And if the stuff that's junked is good, keep it and use it somewhere else. To this day, I have several "orphans" of writing that are waiting patiently for a home in which to land.
When you're sitting down with the intention to write, do not, under any circumstances, go back to what you wrote the previous day and edit it... set aside time for editing, but when it's time to actually move on with the story without looking back at that typo you made in that paragraph you wrote yesterday, do just that. Otherwise - no progress. Even if you end up with the perfect excerpt, the low word count can be really discouraging, especially if you're attempting a novel or something of similar length.
Simple Advice
This is something I have lived by most of my life.
Write what you know, research the rest, and if you need help, ask.
It doesn't take much to sit down and write something, anything that travels through your mind. But it does take time to learn, to discover diverse ways to say the same thing one reads in the thousands of novels, and millions of poetry laid out before us. That's where the Internet comes in handy, but even then, not even the Internet can give you what you need.
That's when you start asking questions of your peers, friends, family, and continue reading other well-established authors.
Here are some other simple tips:
Avoid distractions.
Set a set time to write each day, be it five minutes or five hours, and stick to it.
Accept criticism, be it good, bad, or indifferent.
Carry a note pad with you when out and about. Jot down things of interest Consider what you write to be somethings useable for background info for you, be it vegetable, mineral, or human.
Get money out of your head. Write because it pleases you. If you think money first, your writing will be shit. Craft it, think of it as your best friend, or even your most private lover.
Don't settle to write in one genre. Expand yourself. Challenge yourself.
Another phrase I have is "Less is More." Oft times the less you say in writing, the bigger the impact on the reader.
And I, like my favorite author, Stephen King; use less adverbs in your writing. "He closed the door firmly." Firmly doesn't need to be there as he closed the door. Words like firmly, gently, softly in most cases doesn't need to be used. It's known as over emphasizing. "He shook his head" you don't need to follow that with "left to right". Get the idea?
Lastly, always remember why you write. Each writer has their own reason. Perhaps just to release tension, create a personal diary, that all-American great novel, or perhaps because they want to entertain the reader.
Entertain the reader. And that is what we do on Prose.