“Shrink Down, Abstract Up”: Tools for Evoking Metaphorical Thought
“Metaphor is the raw uranium of writing.”
– Alvin Knox
Tools:
- Willingness to exercise a fluid mindset. 
- Willingness to send your critic to tea. 
- Twenty minutes (ideally) 
Choose a primary element to approach: Anything!
1. Describe it concretely:
- Use intricate detail. Shrink down inside each detail and describe it, shrinking deeper down in further detail. 
- Use all your senses. If you do not know what the primary element smells like, make it up. 
- Be inventive! 
2. Record your first physical encounter with the primary element.
- Observe the encounter omnisciently. 
- Enter slow motion and engage all your physical senses. 
- Do not write about your emotional state or response. 
- Consider: Where, When, the Season, the Weather, the Event, your Company, What preceded the encounter with your primary object. 
- How did you physically feel in the moment? 
3. Recall a recent encounter with the primary object.
- Describe it physically. 
- But allow an element of personal thought: How do you deal with the object? How do you respond? 
4. Give the primary element a form capable of sentient thought, a form you can address and expect it to understand.
