A running collection of starting points, not homework.
Every prompt in the library is meant to get you writing within minutes, whether you have twenty minutes free or an entire Sunday afternoon.
Pick a card, set a timer, see what shows up.
Members browse the library between sessions when they want to write something outside the current group focus, or when a facilitator hasn't assigned anything that week. The prompts are organized loosely by category so you can match one to your mood, whether that's a memory you want to revisit or a character who's been stuck in your notes for months.
Nothing in the library is graded or reviewed automatically. If you want feedback on something a prompt produced, you bring it to a group session or a coaching call. Otherwise, it's simply yours.
Four ways into a story that hasn't started yet.
Memory Prompts
Sensory-focused cues, like the smell of a childhood kitchen or the sound of a specific street, meant to pull personal detail onto the page.
Character Prompts
Scenarios that force a decision, like writing a character's response to bad news they weren't expecting, to surface who they really are.
Setting Prompts
Exercises built around place, from an imagined room to a real location you know too well to describe carefully.
Dialogue Prompts
Short exchanges between two people that ask you to reveal conflict or affection without ever stating it directly.
What this actually looks like on the page.
One recurring memory prompt asks you to describe a room from your childhood using only sound and touch, no visual description allowed. It sounds like a small restriction, but it usually forces out details people forget they remember, like the particular creak of a floorboard or the texture of a specific couch cushion.
A character prompt from the same week might ask you to write a scene where your character lies about something small, then have another character in the scene notice. Two prompts, two very different muscles, both usable in the same fifteen-minute sitting.
The library is part of the group program and coaching membership.
New prompts are added on a rolling basis, and older ones stay archived rather than disappearing, so you can return to a category months later and find it still there. Access comes bundled with participation in the weekly group circles or with individual coaching, since the prompts work best alongside the feedback structure rather than as a standalone product.
Want to see how the library fits into a typical week?
Reach out and we can walk through how prompts, group sessions, and feedback connect together.