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Usually it's something that somebody will give you, and you need to write a story or scene based on it. Could be telling you to write from a specific POV: "Write a story from the perspective of a flower being picked." Or an event: "Write a story about a wedding, but the groom never shows up."I'm confessing my ignorance and old-schoolishness, but I have no idea what the OP is asking. What are story prompts? What does it mean for a prompt to be assigned? Why would one write a story this way?
Just write a story. What is the issue?
Usually it's something that somebody will give you, and you need to write a story or scene based on it. Could be telling you to write from a specific POV: "Write a story from the perspective of a flower being picked." Or an event: "Write a story about a wedding, but the groom never shows up."
There are literally thousands of them, most of them are meh, boring, bland, uninspired, but some are pretty decent. The ones you find online tend to be amateur-level stuff that's good if you're just starting out and have no experience whatsoever, have no idea how to write, or what to write, and you'll take anything someone gives you.
More advanced prompts go into deeper, more nuanced things, or will give you the starting sentence/paragraph. For example, I found this one: Maisie wasn’t fond of ducks. But now this small, noisy gray one seemed to be following her home.
Then you have to write the rest of the story about Maisie and her duck. And if you're me, there's really only one place a duck following you home can ever lead...
Corkscrew penis.
I saw the word "assigned" in the OP's post, which is why I didn't just go to, "Write whatever you want," since I'm assuming it's for a class or course of some kind.I guess my question would be, what's the context? If it's a class assignment, I get it. But in what other context would this come up? Why would one concern oneself with prompts?
I belong to a writing group and the prompt was: Imagine you and a group were trapped. It could be a plane crash, a cave, etc. What was the solution and how did it impact your mental health? At that point I did not how how to start it and therefore I got stuck in writing a 3000 word story on it.OK. Thanks for clarifying. I truly had no idea what was being asked.
I guess my question would be, what's the context? If it's a class assignment, I get it. But in what other context would this come up? Why would one concern oneself with prompts?
The OP wasn't clear about the context, so it's difficult to know how to answer. Context is everything.
'Well, the Skipper, Mr. and Mrs. Howell, the Professor, MaryAnn and Ginger all got together a bunch of times and did a bunch of things and they only ever let me watch.'I belong to a writing group and the prompt was: Imagine you and a group were trapped. It could be a plane crash, a cave, etc. What was the solution and how did it impact your mental health?
I belong to a writing group and the prompt was: Imagine you and a group were trapped. It could be a plane crash, a cave, etc. What was the solution and how did it impact your mental health? At that point I did not how how to start it and therefore I got stuck in writing a 3000 word story on it.
Same here. If it works for some people to improve their writing or a fun challenge for them, that's great.OK. That clarifies things.
I can see how it would be less fun to write in response to a "prompt" (it's not a word I've ever used before in this sense, so pardon my ignorance) that wasn't internally generated.
That's why you take and twist it into something fun, ridiculous and silly.When a prompt started to look like a homework assignment, then it feels like an obligation rather than a fun project, as it was in my place.
Well, considering the site we're on, I believe the only appropriate answers are "a giant orgy" and "very positively."Imagine you and a group were trapped. It could be a plane crash, a cave, etc. What was the solution and how did it impact your mental health?
That's an easy one, doable.I have only written to prompts when contracted to do.
"Write a romantic 1,000 word story about [character x] breaking up from his male lover [character y] when he gets engaged to a woman."
Otherwise, I draw my inspiration from things that come to me without prompting. I find that process much more rewarding, in a non-financial sense.
For context, I'll throw in that it was for a scene in a popular British television program that would be performed by hand puppets.That's an easy one, doable.
Same. I was not unpleasantly disappointed.We talk about AI so much around here, I thought this was going to be about using LLMs better.
If you're stuck on how to start it, then don't start it. End it. Write the ending first, work your way back. Take it out of order, whichever part is most speaking to you, write that, then expand out. I tend to write fairly linearly, being aI belong to a writing group and the prompt was: Imagine you and a group were trapped. It could be a plane crash, a cave, etc. What was the solution and how did it impact your mental health? At that point I did not how how to start it and therefore I got stuck in writing a 3000 word story on it.