#020 Your 100 Word Story

Letā€™s get this weekend write-life started! From this Friday forward, Iā€™ll include an image prompt and a few words to get your brain percolating towards a story. But only if you need it! Write whatever sparks joy for you.

Hereā€™s how:

  • Exactly 100 words. Not 99 or 101. The Word Count Police are tracking!

  • Genre? Writerā€™s choice! So long as you give us all the thrills and the feels.

  • To Fic or to Non-Fic? You decide. What matters most is that youā€™re satisfied with the output.

  • Copy/paste your words in the comments, then share on your own Substack, and maybe, share to social media!

  • A Note on Substack Notes | Click the šŸ”„ ā€œRestack with a Noteā€ and copy/paste your story for added reach and growth.

IMAGE PROMPT

There is so much rich history that can be found in the span of time of a gnarled tree. What has it witnessed in its life cycle? Who has sat under the shade it once provided? When was it planted? What story will you choose to tell?

REMINDER: You donā€™t have to write your story just on Fridays! Take this sentiment and free write all weekend long!

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Comments

  1. Tyler Tarlton

    Sweat poured down my brow as I tapped the keyboard. Time ran short, very short, and I still had three dozen words to go. The image of the gnarled tree gave me no inspiration and the act of brainstorming a different idea took so much extra unneeded effort. I had to get this done before I started the work day! Or more accurately, before my boss showed up. I checked the clock, 15 seconds. A few more keystrokes andā€¦done! Whew. I smiled and sent in the story. A SIREN blared. The word count police! I had gone over by one word!

  2. Alex Learmont

    My name is Unimportant. My ancient craft is that of Story-blabber – a spinner of tales! Some story-tellers believe in starting at the beginning, but thatā€™s not my way. I think stories are like sausages – you donā€™t need to begin at the beginning, you can start wherever you like, in the middle – or at either end. Cut them into slices, mix them up, let the pieces fall as they may, then string them up and watch the story write itself! Taste your way backwards or forwards, it doesnā€™t matter which – youā€™ll have it all in the end!

  3. Stephanie Loomis

    At my roots there is a hole and from it rises a scar, put there by a lightning strike decades ago.
    I was young then, barely five feet tall. No child had climbed my branches yet; no young lovers had carved their initials in my trunk; no old men had leaned into me for support.

    A day of sunshine erupted in black clouds dropping hail and torrential rain. Wind twisted my trunk just at the moment the electric arc seared through me, leaving me for dead. But I lived. I healed and grew around the wound, becoming stronger than before.

  4. Stirling S Newberry

    Brash Ambitions
    There was a wind flowing through my black hair. It came from high in the hills of Nebraska and hit my paperback book by Kinsey. I look up at the tall, wizened willow with glaze high up. With the clouds blotting the sun and rain far away against the knothole nearby. My dress bloomed in the fall dayā€™s air.
    Oh, how I wish to be swept away from this earth and gaze at the celestial heavens, where the secrets of love were held in a locket clasped with a brooch.
    Twisting and turning the tree said what I only whispered.

  5. Susie Mawhinney

    Counting those who fall.

    A mighty oak hid Jake as he watched the fairies swirling and dancing into the night, spellbound, unable too move.
    Heā€™d listened to every story told about these woodland fairies and their magic since he was a child but never believed a wordā€¦Ā 
    ā€˜Never let them catch you watching they said –Ā  thats how they cast their spell!ā€™
    He shifted position, only very slightly but fairy turned their eyes on him.Ā 
    His last thought was, ā€˜The storiesā€¦. What will I tell my wife?ā€™Ā as his legs gave way under him and his soul left his body.
    The mighty oak, whisperā€™s 746ā€¦.

  6. The Man Behind the Screen

    Old boughs ached. Branches hung limp from a gnarled, knobby trunk; a series of sad, aged shoulders sagging with the weight of centuries. Even the tiny leaves were taken by the weight. Once green and lustrous, age yellowed them, made them brittle.
    Age was thought to make trees stronger. It helped them grow, made them wise, let them witness the world around them for so long that they seemed timeless. Such was the thinking of short-lived man.
    Well, after such long life, perhaps death wasnā€™t so bad. After all, trees are mortal, too. This one just forgot for a while.

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