#writing excercise

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Start your story with…:

“I always knew I’d get my fifteen minutes of fame.

I just didn’t know that they would be my last.”

Go write!

ayrusss:

Collection of some of my fave prompts.

NSFW cut below‼️

Dialogues

  1. “I trust you, more than anyone else”
  2. “Will you just…hold me? Please?”
  3. “I don’t care, to me you’re perfect!”
  4. “I believe in you”
  5. “You make me happy”
  6. “Nothing is going to happen to you”
  7. “Take my jacket, it’s cold”
  8. “My friends get annoyed by how much I talk about you sometimes”
  9. “I’m not going anywhere”
  10. *A is lying down on B’s chest* “I can hear your heartbeat” “Does that make you happy?”
  11. “It reminded me of you.”


Scenarios

  1. Sharing a dessert
  2. Slow dancing
  3. Fake dating turn into lovers
  4. A meeting B’s family for the first time
  5. Learning each other’s mother tongue language
  6. A notices that B is starting at an item in the store. For their next birthday A buys the item for them.

Dialogues

  1. “They deserve better than me”
  2. “Don’t mess with my family”
  3. “I trusted you…”
  4. “I’m not going to cry. This isn’t worth crying over”
  5. “I never thought I’d be the one to hurt you”
  6. “I guess were just not meant to be”
  7. “You’re pathetic”
  8.  “You’re not worth my time”
  9. “How could you do this to me?”
  10. “You’ve changed”
  11. “This isn’t the man/woman/person that I fell in love with. I want the old (name) back”
  12. “Please stay”


Scenarios

  1. B reassuring A promising them that they will be back. Years later, B never returned: either because they’re dead or they’ve moved on and found someone else
  2. A is holding a gun towards B in tears
  3. A goes through an accident (can be life changing) that leaves them distant and bitter making B upset
  4. A finally has the courage to confess to B but when they approach B, they find a wedding band on their finger/kissing someone else
  5. Unrequited love

Keep reading

What gender is your main character in your WIP? What is the gender of the main character in most of your works? Try broadening your horizons.

This could mean that if you’re used to writing men, then you should write women, and vice versa, but I want you to go broader than that. Gender means a lot of different things to different people. If you don’t know what I’m talking about, well, you have your research cut out for you. 

Write about someone who is a different gender, different sexual orientation, etc. than your norm. Only you can know what your norm is, so only you can know what would be a challenge for you. But I do encourage you to challenge yourself. You might just learn a little something along the way.

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