But to use your examples: (These are starting points only, to give you an idea of the types of questions I meant. Not all of them will apply to a particular example.)
A phrase or two. What are three different ways the phrase(s) could be interpreted and misinterpreted, together and separately if there are more than one? What are three possible character types that the phrase could describe? (This doesn't have to be a direct description.) What would two or three "opposite phrases" be? (yes, multiple "opposites"... think of "I am always right" as having "I am always wrong" and "you are always right" as two of its possible opposites... and those two aren't the same thing, nor are they opposites of each other.) Why would somebody say that phrase? (even - or especially? - if it isn't originally intended as a line of dialogue)
A song lyric. What are three different literal things the lyrics could be a metaphor for? What are three kinds of characters those lyrics could be used to describe? What are three events those lyrics could be used to describe? What about in an ironic fashion? A literal fashion? A metaphoric fasion?
An original thought of your own. ... well, it's a bit harder to come up with questions for this one without knowing a little bit about it :-)
How what? You are asking questions about your tiny seed of an idea, trying to find what will make it grow. I deliberately phrased the questions so that they specifically asked for more than one answer (three was chosen arbitrarily, you can come up with more answers than that if you like) because the first answer and usually the second are obvious and crappy answers that you don't want. I've gotten in the habit of making multiple answers, so I don't usually phrase my questions that way, I just keep repeating them until I think I have enough answers.
If you would like some more specific questions, I idle in #writing and am even at my computer for a good chunk of the day tomorrow (Tuesday). Feel free to drop by :-) -- Who needs to be big and burly when you can just apply physics? [ Parent ]
So sometimes I'll be reading a book or watching a TV show or something and have an idea for a situation that I would perhaps have handled differently. And the old What if... question comes to mind, and I sit down to write, or at least to sketch out, a story.
It's often the case that these things occur to me from asking questions like "How would life be different if I were..." of "What kinds of senses to trees have, and what do they do with the information they take in?" Exploring dark places since last Thursday [ Parent ]