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Glossary›Free Writing

Glossary

Free Writing

A spontaneous, unedited writing practice that bypasses the inner critic to access raw thought and creative flow, popularized by Natalie Goldberg and Peter Elbow.

What is Free Writing?

Free writing is a composition technique in which a person writes continuously for a predetermined period—typically 10 to 20 minutes—without regard to spelling, grammar, topic, or coherence. The writer produces text without stopping to edit, censor, or revise, allowing thoughts to flow directly from mind to page. The practice aims to bypass the internal critic, reduce performance anxiety, and access deeper layers of creative thought. Though developed as a pedagogical tool in academic writing instruction, free writing has become a staple practice in creative writing, journaling communities, and personal development circles.

Origins & Lineage

Free writing emerged from two distinct but complementary traditions in the 1970s. Composition theorist Peter Elbow introduced the method in his 1973 book Writing Without Teachers, proposing it as an antidote to writer’s block and a way to generate raw material before the editing phase. Elbow described free writing as writing that is “free” from the constraints of immediate evaluation, arguing that premature editing kills creative momentum.

Simultaneously, poet and writing teacher Natalie Goldberg developed a related practice rooted in Zen Buddhist meditation. Her 1986 book Writing Down the Bones: Freeing the Writer Within presented free writing as a contemplative discipline akin to seated meditation, emphasizing non-attachment to outcome and direct contact with present-moment experience. Goldberg’s approach drew explicitly from her study with Zen master Dainin Katagiri Roshi in Minneapolis during the 1970s and early 1980s.

Both traditions share intellectual ancestry with automatic writing experiments conducted by Surrealist artists in the 1920s, though free writing differs in its pedagogical intent and lack of occult framework. André Breton and Philippe Soupault’s Les Champs Magnétiques (1919) employed stream-of-consciousness transcription to access the unconscious mind, a technique that influenced later writing practices but remained anchored in psychoanalytic theory rather than craft instruction.

How It’s Practiced

A typical free writing session begins with setting a timer—commonly 10, 15, or 20 minutes. The writer selects a prompt or begins without one, then writes continuously until the timer sounds. The cardinal rule is to keep the hand moving; if the writer loses the thread, they repeat the last word or phrase until new material emerges. Practitioners do not lift the pen to cross out words or reread what has been written.

Goldberg outlined specific guidelines: keep your hand moving, don’t cross out, don’t worry about spelling or punctuation, lose control, don’t think or get logical, and go for the jugular (write what is most alive or frightening). Elbow’s method is more flexible but shares the core principle of non-stop production.

The resulting text is usually not intended for publication. Instead, it serves as compost—raw material from which polished work might later be extracted. Some practitioners read their free writes aloud in groups without commentary; others mine them privately for images, phrases, or emotional truth. The physical act of handwriting is often emphasized, though typing is also practiced.

Free Writing Today

Free writing appears in university composition courses, creative writing workshops, therapeutic journaling programs, and contemplative writing retreats. Teachers trained in Goldberg’s lineage lead “Writing Practice” sessions at meditation centers and urban studios. Online platforms like 750 Words (launched 2009) gamify the practice with streak tracking and word-count badges. Julia Cameron’s The Artist’s Way (1992) popularized “Morning Pages”—three longhand pages written immediately upon waking—a variant that has reached millions of practitioners outside traditional writing communities.

Writing retreats often combine free writing with silent meditation periods, treating the practice as a form of active contemplation. Academic writing centers use timed free writes to help students overcome perfectionism and generate thesis material. Mental health practitioners incorporate free writing into expressive writing therapy, though clinical protocols typically involve more structured prompts.

Common Misconceptions

Free writing is not automatic writing in the spiritualist tradition; it does not claim to channel external entities or access paranormal information. It is also not free-form poetry or stream-of-consciousness fiction, though it may produce raw material for such work. The practice does not guarantee publishable prose—most free writing is deliberately disposable.

Free writing is not the same as brainstorming or mind mapping, both of which involve selection and organization. It differs from expressive writing protocols studied by psychologist James Pennebaker, which direct writers to explore specific traumatic events over four consecutive days. While some practitioners report therapeutic benefits, free writing was developed as a craft tool, not a clinical intervention.

The practice does not require belief in Zen Buddhism or any spiritual framework, though Goldberg’s presentation includes contemplative language. Elbow’s secular academic version functions identically without reference to meditation traditions.

How to Begin

Beginners should read either Peter Elbow’s Writing Without Teachers (particularly the chapter on free writing) or Natalie Goldberg’s Writing Down the Bones. Choose one set of rules and follow it for at least two weeks before modifying the practice. Set a timer for 10 minutes, use pen and paper if possible, and commit to keeping the hand moving regardless of what emerges.

Local writing groups often include free writing sessions; search for “writing practice” groups affiliated with Zen centers or writing studios. Online, the 750 Words platform provides a private digital space with minimal features designed to support daily practice. For a contemplative approach, consider attending a weekend retreat led by teachers in Goldberg’s lineage or reading her follow-up books Wild Mind and Thunder and Lightning. For an academic approach, university writing centers frequently offer free writing workshops during the semester.

Related terms

morning pagesstream of consciousnesszen meditationjournalingcreative writingexpressive writing therapy
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