There's nothing quite like a blank page/ computer screen.

Dusting off my trusty Scrivener. Putting all my scribbled notes into folders (the Scrivener kind).
I'm reading a few encouraging quotes about beginnings.
Here's a good one
That's how a good story starts. It doesn't spell everything out for you. A good story gives you something to think about. It raises as many questions as it answers.
~ Eric Kimmel
(via Bobbi Miller's website. Lots of good stuff for writers. CHECK IT OUT, HERE. )
How about this from a little notebook I scribbled in frantically during a Maryland SCBWI event. Maybe 2009? (I never throw notebooks away, do you?)
The only way to figure out who a character is is to write. Write a whole draft.
You will never know what you are doing.
You will discover.
from Coe Booth, though possibly paraphrased, so don't quote me/her.
And another hastily scribbled note, from Roy Clark at the St. Petersburg Times Festival of Reading, Fall, 2011:
Our writing standards are too high, too quick. Lower them at the beginning of a project. After you have a draft, raise your standards.
Here's to new beginnings, 2013. As we flip our January calendars, how are your beginnings?
Your revisions and your revisits?
Here's what's on my desk this morning. Enough inspiration! And now, to write.