Exercise: Spider Diagrams

For this exercise I need to create a spider diagram for each of the following words: Seaside, Childhood, Angry, Festival.

I will then test my spider diagram with another person, tick words that are in common, and include the other person’s words using a different color.

I will then reflect on which word I found more difficult to work with and the methods I used to think of more words during the process.

The Spider Diagrams

The keywords in these diagrams are based only on my personal experience. I have not taken any inspiration from external sources.
When I finished, I tested the diagrams with my wife. I have added some of her keywords in red and ticked the words that we shared in common.

The strategy I used for this exercise was to lockdown my mind on every single word, one at a time. I had a musical tune in mind for each word. I thought of things that were related to the words, feelings, objects and moments lived through my life. The word that surprised me was seaside because what came in my mind right away was a fantasy environment with tropical islands and sirens. My mind was locked to that environment, so I went for it and wrote down the keywords. “Angry” was the word my wife and I found the most difficult. I think it’s because adjectives are hard to describe. I related the word “angry” with drawing, because its what I often do when I feel that way.

I noted that my wife’s spider diagrams expressed more feelings, with an overall sense of happiness and love.

Final Thoughts

I really like this method for organizing keywords. Before starting this course, I used to brainstorm and write keywords in a messy way, with no structure. With this method keywords are better organized. For example, before starting this course  I didn’t write a main keyword and then child keywords. I would write the words “tree” and “leaves” separately, while instead “leaves” can be seen as a child keyword of “tree”. This leads to a better organization. I also found interesting the “joint brainstorm”. In the case of the word “festival”, for example, the keyword “fireworks” chosen by my wife sparked an alternative idea on how I could illustrate a festival.