I used a creative writing prompt for the first time and wrote something I'm actually proud of

MollyPolly

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I've always thought using creative writing prompts was kind of cheating—like you couldn't come up with your own ideas. But I've been in a major slump lately, staring at blank documents for hours. Out of desperation, I tried one I found online: 'Write about a character who receives a letter they never open.' Something about that just clicked. I wrote 2,000 words in one sitting about a woman whose estranged sister sends her letters for years, and she never opens them, but keeps them all in a shoebox. It's not finished, but it's the most I've written in months. I guess prompts aren't training wheels—they're more like a key to unlock something that was already there . Has anyone else had a prompt that just hit you the right way? I'd love to find more like that.
 
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The idea that they're "cheating" is such a weird gatekeeping thing.

Your unopened letters concept is genuinely compelling because it's built on absence. The letters exist, but their contents are unknown. The relationship exists, but the communication is one-way. That tension is what drives narrative. You've created a story engine without even realizing it.

The best prompts work like that—they give you a situation that's inherently dramatic. Your job is just to explore it honestly.

For more prompts with similar energy:
  • "Write about someone who finds a diary from their future self"
  • "Write about a conversation that happens entirely in silence"
  • "Write about a character who has a recurring dream about a place that doesn't exist"
  • "Write about two people who communicate only through sticky notes"
These all work because they create structure without dictating content. Prompts are scaffolding.
 
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