A step-by-step guide through my process

On May 1st, 2023 I made the decision to write one 100 word story every single day. As of today I have written one-hundred 100 word stories! These aren’t my first. Prior to doing this I already had a back log of 75+ 100 word stories from previous years. I honestly wasn’t sure how long I could keep this up but now that I have been able to do this for 100 days in a row, I wanted to look back on them and talk a little bit about how I came to do this every day and end with what the next 100 days will look like.

WHERE TO BEGIN?

Something I find that always helps me is to have a theme or something that can get my brain thinking about a story. The entire month of May I was winging it for every story and that was really difficult. I knew right away I needed something to help me make coming up with a story easier to manage.

No sooner was I scrambling for assistance when it was nearing June that I received the deck of tarot cards I had been waiting on for two years! They were really so helpful and I will be leaning on them in the future.

So, if you’re anything like me, sometimes it can be difficult to just come up with something on the spot. Especially when you add in the pressure of making that story just 100 words in length. The last thing you want to do is spend forever trying to come up with something off the top of your head.

My advice is to find something you like or enjoy that has a variety of them to cover multiple days or an unlimited number of days. Some examples could be plants from nature, colors, one room locations, television shows, the 50 states, etc. You can take any of those or more examples to fill in an entire calendar and then use those to write a story.

DON’T TAKE FOREVER

Seriously! It’s just 100 words. And while you might think it’s really tough to get it all in there. It isn’t. The beauty of 100 words is that it’s not meant to be “finished” in the same way we think of finished today. The point is to leave the reader wanting more or at least being so inspired by your story that they want to continue it themselves in their mind. It takes less than one minute to read so it shouldn’t take you one hour to write.

On average, I spend less than 30 minutes writing my 100 word stories. That’s if I have no place to start. When I have a theme, that time is cut in half! Knowing my next move always helps get my creative juices flowing.

BE FLEXIBLE & PIVOT

If the theme you started out with isn’t working how you thought it would, there’s no shame in changing it up. The point is to write a story and whatever you need to do to get that story written is what matters. For example, for July I wanted to use songs as my theme. It took me about a week into doing it to realize that my idea was much too broad and I was left with way too many songs I wanted to use but no real direction at all. The idea was sound but my execution just wasn’t up to my personal standards. I didn’t want to abandon the idea completely! So I adjusted and came up with a plan B that worked out better than I had expected.

Instead of just saying my theme would be songs, I went a bit deeper and made it songs from musical movies. But that wasn’t enough. I wanted to tie them all together some how so I decided to make every story take place in the same nightclub where the narrator was the same throughout and there would be recurring characters. This is not the usual way to go about writing 100 word stories but the very nature of them is that they don’t follow any sort of normal rules. They are intended to be different and unique and whatever you need them to be to tell a story.

START WITH 50…

I know what you must be thinking, 50 words is way harder than 100 so what on Earth am I talking about? Okay, so the way I am able to write a story in 100 words is by writing the first 50 words with ease. When you think about telling a story, even a long one, the first 50 words are actually the easiest. You’re getting your feet wet. Laying the ground work. Driving the plane down the runway. You haven’t taken off yet.

When I’m writing my 100 word stories I start writing and when I see myself nearing 50 words I’ll stop myself. Sometimes I’m a few words over or under. The point is to get to as close to 50 as I can.

Why do I stop? Well, it’s at this point that I actually start to edit my story. Sure, I could write 100+ words and edit down from there. But I find when I do that I will have way more than 100 words and find it much harder to shave off entire sentences to get down to 100. It’s much easier to chip away words than a full on sentence!

Also, stopping at 50 helps me to “wrap it up” in the next 50. When I say I don’t like to go too far over 100 words in my first rough draft, I mean it. I’ve gotten so good at this that I typically will be “finished” with a story under 103 words. So, in the end, my editing is just to remove those 3 words.

EDIT WITH PRECISION

When writing such short stories it helps to be able to see an entire sentence and know which word or words can be cut without losing the meaning you’re trying to convey. This is a skill that can only be learned from practice and doing it over and over again. Don’t beat yourself up about it if you can’t do it right away.

I’ve written close to 200 of these and I feel like I still have much to learn with how to best edit such a short-short story.

The best way I know to do my editing is to read and reread and re-reread the story. Each passthrough I’m removing a word(s) and reading it again to make sure it still hits like I want.

HOW DO YOU KNOW WHEN IT’S DONE?

This is a tough one to answer but this is my “rule of thumb” approach when it comes to not spending more time that I feel is necessary on a story. I realize that one story can be told and retold a bunch of different ways and if I allow myself the time I could easily rewrite the story a dozen ways and get 100 words and a different story each time. But that isn’t the assignment. Although, now that I think about it, I wonder if that would make for an interesting experiment to try out in the future?

I know when it’s done when I reach 100 words. Simple as that.

All I will allow myself to do once I see my word count meter hit 100 is to reread the story ONE LAST TIME. If I see one word I want to swap for a better word then I will do it that one time. Otherwise, the moment I see I’m at 100 words, I read it, make sure there are no obvious typos in the words, copy, paste, done.

Trust me, you don’t want to spend more than 30 minutes writing a 100 word story. By that time you’ll drive yourself crazy!

THE NEXT 100 WORDS

I did so much and learned so much from writing these stories that I think for my next 100 and honestly, going into 2024, I want to involve all of you way more. I know my readers are comprised of writers (whether professionally or for enjoyment) and I want to do more to collaborate and connect with this little community of 100 word story readers and writers. Maybe I’ve found a way to do just that.

Also in July I actually did start collaborating weekly with fellow writers to jointly write a 100 word story. In those cases I write 50 words and then another person writes 50 words that will make an unexpected and new 100 word story. So far it’s been amazing and I don’t want that to stop. So, if you’re reading this and you’d like to collaborate with me to write a 100 word story, reply to this email or leave a comment and let’s connect!

August will continue my journey with the Literary Tarot deck as well as writing stories using Substack Publication Names as inspiration. This is how I’m trying to incentivize more people to complete their fiction Substacks to make them better.

September will be another month of tarot but October has me most excited. I’ll share much more details on September 1st and the last week of September will be a teaser to lead up to October but it will forever change the look of 100 word stories, that’s for sure.

Will you join me on my next 100 days? Let me know in the comments.

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Comments

  1. Stephen Scott

    I’m definitely going to start writing some drabbles and once I’ve got my confidence up I’d love to collaborate!

    • Erica Drayton

      You’re on! I am working on a regular “boot camp” where I’ll work with groups of ppl who want to learn and improve on their 100 word story writing. I’m still working out the details. But whenever you’re ready, I’ll be here!

  2. David Sheley

    “…will forever change the look…”
    I see what you did there. 😉 I’m lookin forward to it!

    • Erica Drayton

      I’ve actually been practicing, if you can believe it! The closer it gets to October the more nervous coupled with excitement I become! Maybe I will share my practice pages closer to Pentober 😳

  3. Ian Titler

    Liking the stories, interested. at 68, I have many amusing anecdotes, may try to put some into 100 words

    • Erica Drayton

      Noted! If you want to shoot me an email at ericadrayton@substack.com I will reply with further details. I’m currently booked through September with collaborations as I’m only taking on one a week, especially as I work, have my own story I have to get out, and I’m in the middle of moving. But we shall collaborate and it will be stupendous!

  4. Carolyn McBride 🏳️‍🌈🇨🇦

    Collaboration sounds fun, Erica! If you’re not all booked up already.
    This was a terrific peek-behind-the-scenes, I really enjoyed it!

    • Erica Drayton

      If you don’t mind waiting to collaborate till October, feel free to shoot me an email and I will send you the deets on how it works! ericadrayton@substack.com

      • Carolyn McBride 🏳️‍🌈🇨🇦

        Will do!

  5. Virginia Neely

    I’ve been writing 100 word stories (almost) every day too. Inspiration can come from anywhere. Sometimes I’ll just pick a random word from the dictionary. I’m publishing them as 2-Bite stories.

  6. Andrew Smith

    Nicely done, Erica!
    I especially appreciate the “don’t take forever” mantra (probably not a huge surprise since I also like to publish every day). This will help a LOT of writers.

  7. Tyler Tarlton

    Never written today short of a story but would be interested in trying out a collaborator sometime!

    • Tyler Tarlton

      Should say “that” instead of “today”. Gah!

    • Tyler Tarlton

      Also, “collaboration” not “collaborator”. 🤦

  8. Lisa Ditalia

    Yes sign me up. Like to try this!

  9. Mary Carroll Moore

    So useful to hear these steps. I love flash but mine tend to end up around 500 words, and I’m having fun with these ideas to trim, trim, trim. Thank you.

    • Erica Drayton

      Nothing like a good trimming! I look forward to writing longer pieces in the future. Sometimes I worry I won’t be able to do it as my brain is so trained to write 100 words!

  10. Kathryn Vercillo

    Thanks for linking me to this. I find it super interesting to learn that you start with those first 50 words. I am a very very wordy person and would never have thought to approach it this way. Just hearing about that really reshapes some of my ideas for writing. <3 <3

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