Category: Prompts

  • Caught Up . . . Prompt 788

    black notebook beside white skeleton
    Photo by Tara Winstead on Pexels.com

    Are you, or is your fictional character, caught up?

    Caught up with current slang

    Caught up with current events

    Caught up with something that takes too much of your energy or time

    Caught up with TV shows you want to watch.

    Caught up with correspondence: letters, emails, texts, phone calls, messages

    Caught up with things that need to be done? If yes, how does that feel?

    If not, what would it take to be caught up?

  • Learn from reading . . . Prompt #787

    What are you currently reading, or have recently read?

    Did you have an epiphany, a realization, or learn something with this reading?

    The Write Spot Series of Books

    #justwrite #iamwriting #iamawriter

  • Performing Arts . . . Prompt #786

    Write about . . .

    Being in a parade

    Running/walking a marathon

    Being in a performance: theatre, chorus, band, dance, or ???

    #amwriting #iamawriter #justwrite

  • Wheels . . . Prompt #785

    white mountain bike
    Photo by Haydan As-soendawy on Pexels.com

    Write about learning how to . . .

    Ride a bicycle or a unicycle

    Ride a skateboard

    Roller skate

    Drive a car

    Who helped you? Or, did you figure it out yourself?

    How old were you?

    Where did these wheels take you?

    #justwrite #iamawriter #iamwriting

  • Magical . . . Prompt #784

    A writing prompt can be a word, a phrase, a book title, a line from a poem, or a line from a song.

    Today’s writing prompt is a word:

    Magical

    Write whatever comes to mind when you think “magical.”

    Blog posts that capture magical and creativity musings.

    Writing is Magical

    Creativity as Magic

    #justwrite   #amwriting   #iamawriter   #creativity

  • Trouble . . . Prompt #783

    Today’s writing prompt, Trouble, is brought to us by Marcia Aldrich’s post on Brevity, “Too Vast for Words: Writing prompts for Large Subjects.”

    In this Brevity post, Marcia asks:

    Do you have a history with this word, trouble? How long has it been important to you?

    Why this word and not near synonyms?

    Is it part of a song or movie or book that matters to you?

    Does your sense of the word differ from what other people might think of it? If so, how?

    Writing Prompt: Trouble

    Just Write!

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  • Sentence Starts . . . Prompt #782

    Sentence starts to inspire ideas to write about:

    Sentence starts

    If my family had a motto, it would be . . .

    The kitchen table . . .

    The worst, or best, thing about my mother / father / sibling / grandparent . . .

    I will never forget . . .

    I will always remember . . .

    My favorite thing to do when I was 8 years old . . . 12 years old . . .14 years old . . .

    On Saturdays, I liked to . . .

    I want you to know . . .

    Just Write!

    #justwrite   #iamwriting  #iamawriter

  • Then and Now . . . Prompt #781

    As we go through life, interacting with people, we learn ways of being in the world. We learn coping strategies.

    Sometimes we find that what used to work, no longer works.

    Writing Prompt

    Write about you then and you now. “Then” is whenever you want it to be.

    Write about how you used to react to people and certain situations.

    Write about how you now react in the same situations.

    Cover of “The Write Spot to Jumpstart Your Writing: Connections” features Marlene’s mother ~1945 and letters from her to her mother.

    Connections is a collection of writing from mothers and their adult children, using story-telling as a technique to ignite imagination and to inspire writing.

    Connections is available from your local bookseller and as an ebook (and print) at Amazon.

  • Something happened, and you weren’t the same . . . Prompt #780

    Use a pivotal event as a way into writing a personal essay, or a slice of your life . . .  a memoir, or creative non-fiction.

    A pivotal event is something happened and you weren’t the same after.

    Obvious pivotal events are graduating from school, first job, getting married, having a baby, retiring.

    There are more subtle events that, at the time, you didn’t know would be a pivotal event. Those are the events that could result in a riveting essay, or give you closure.

    Prompt 1

    Make a list of things, events, people that you carry in your mind. These are events that you can’t forget. People who haunt you. Memories that you can’t seem to let go.

    These are things you think about over and over, events that are on repeat in your brain. Things that happened that you can’t stop thinking about, maybe things you lose sleep over.

    Just a list. 

    Visualization

    As you go through this visualization, if you experience anxiety or stress, tap on your sternum with the tips of your fingers. This is a calming and centering activity.

    Stretch. Breathe in. Let go.

    As you go through this visualization, when you get a feeling jot it down.

     Note what the feeling is.

    Note where you feel it in your body.

    And note what caused this feeling.

    If you can, put your hand on where the feeling is and breathe into that space. If you can’t put your hand there, put your thoughts there.

    Go back in in time to when you were 3 or 4 years old.

    See the people surrounding you. Perhaps your parents . . . siblings . . . grandparents.

    Is there something about these people that stand out? Jot down thoughts or ideas that come to you while going through this visualization.

    Make a note where there is energy, perhaps an exciting or an uncomfortable feeling.

    Picture yourself at age 5 or 8. See your aunts . . . uncles . . . cousins. People you spent time with.

    Go to age 9 . . . 10 . . . 11.  Who did you play with? Go to school with?

    Teenage years. What did you do? Who did you hang out with?

    Let a montage of pictures roll by of dating and college years.

    Remember to tap on your chest if you are feeling uneasy or uncomfortable.

    Early married or living together years. See your children, or nieces/nephews as babies, little children.

    Take a deep breath and release.

    Prompt 2

    Choose one thing from your list. Write what happened. Include as many details as you can.

    Excerpt from Brad Yates, Guest Blogger on The Write Spot Blog:

    The Mind Can’t Tell The Difference

    #amwriting #justwrite #iamawriter

  • Movies! . . . Prompt #779

    Movies!

    What movie made you laugh more than any other? 

    Your all-time favorite movie. Why?

    Write about a movie that deeply touched you.

    Write about a movie you saw as a teenager.

    What movie do you remember seeing as a child?

    What makes these movies memorable?