Do you have a question you've always wanted answered? Do you have a helpful idea, a solution, or an answer to a problem you've handled successfully that you'd like to share to help your peers? The Questions and Answers section of Teen Time is specifically for you to ask questions about issues in your life and provide inspiration for others.

Note: Make sure you check out previous questions. You may be able to read or give new and helpful answers.

 
     
  Question 35  
 
Q35   How can I find ideas when I have no inspiration to write a paper?  
    -- high school student  
 
     
  Visitor's Answer 35  
 
A35

For some students, writing comes easily; for others, it is just the opposite. I have found myself in both categories. When the ideas flow, papers and essays get done quickly. The problem starts when the ideas do not flow, and you begin staring at the blank paper or at the computer screen in front of you for a long time. Then, you get up and get yourself something to eat. Then, you come back to the paper or computer, and still no ideas. This can go on and on for hours until you are tempted to give up. The pressure is there, and panic settles in: Where did all the ideas go? What am I going to do?

I have found that whenever this happens, I have a feeling of “lack.” I have noticed that everyone feels this way at some point in life, although in different ways. Some feel that they “lack” being loved, some “lack” money, and many people all over the world lack food and/or justice. When I am stuck on a paper, I feel I “lack” inspiration.

However, the Bible shows many examples where God proves that He always takes care of His creation, and never leaves His children (you and me) in difficult situations. There is a story that has helped me understand that even if we feel we are in great need, we already have an answer to our need -- right where we are. The story is about a poor and desperate widow who was feeling “lack.” She told the prophet Elisha that her husband had died and she had so many debts that the creditors were going to take her two sons into slavery, which was the custom at the time. Elisha answered her cry for help by asking: “What hast thou in the house?” (II Kings 4:2). He was not looking at what she was missing, but at what she already had. The widow said that all she had was a pot of oil. Not much, really. That’s when the prophet told her to go home, borrow as many pots as she could from neighbors, and fill them all with the oil from her own pot. When the widow obeyed, she found that the oil kept coming out from her own pot. She had enough oil to sell in order to pay all her debts and keep her sons.

We can apply this story to our personal situations. When we have no ideas for our essays and fear getting a zero, we can think about the way the prophet Elisha approached the situation of “lack.” He points to the fact that solutions come from the inside, from “in the house” (II Kings 4:2). Creativity is inside all of us! A tiny, little idea appears. It’s a start, and then little by little the inspiration keeps flowing. When we understand that God is the source for creativity, we find that we already have everything we need. As we read in Ecclesiastes: “I know that, whatsoever God doeth, it shall be forever: nothing can be put to it, nor anything taken from it” (3:14).

 
    -- Danielle Deraney, high school student  
       
 
     
     
     
 

Email us your questions, answers, and inspirational comments.

We will answer and post as many Q&As as possible each month. It's always great to include Bible passages that have helped you.

 
 
 

Previous
Questions and Answers

 
  When a friend comes to you with a problem, how can you help him or her when you aren’t sure what to say?  
  If you bully others, why should you stop? And if you’re being bullied, how do you deal with it?  
  Why do people say that confidence is so important for teenagers?  
  How do you make the right decisions?  
  Peer pressure comes up in most of our lives, so how do you say, “No”?  
  How can we be happy when there are so many problems in high school?  
  Is it important to forgive?  
  The Bible says that God created mankind to “have dominion . . . over every living thing.” What exactly does that mean in relation to how we treat our earth?  
  How do you break stereotypes and make new friends when others make fun of you for reaching beyond the “accepted” circle?  
  How do we know if what we want is really what we need?  
  What do you do and how do you work when a teacher doesn't like you?  
  Moses stood on "holy ground." Did that mean he didn't need to go into the Promised Land?  
  How do I handle an abusive relationship?  
  Am I ever going to feel happy again?  
  What exactly is "Moses' sin"?  
  Is there anything in the Bible about interracial relations?  
  How do I deal with rejection?  
  How can you become a better student?  
  Why is the Bible so graphic at times?  
  Are there any Bible stories about relieving stress?  
  Why are the Midianites enslaving the children of Israel around Gideon's time?  
  What if Jesus never lived?  
  Does God really care about us?  
  How do you make good friends?  
  How do you motivate yourself to do things you don't really want to do but you should do?  
  How did the Children of Israel find water in a desert?  
  How do you know what's right to do in different situations?  
  In reference to the question, "Does God exist?" I'd like to learn more about the nature or concept of God.  
  Why did life spans of people go down when the flood happened?  
  How do we know God exists?
 
  I was wondering how to deal with people who speak in a harsh or unkind way unjustly, especially in the work field.
 
  How do you not get caught up in appearances and expectations and still not seem out-of-date, behind the times, or out-of-place?
 
  How can I feel good about myself when I don't like the way I look?  
 
 
     
   
     
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