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The Inkwell Combined Writing Prompt #17 ~ Fiction or Creative Nonfiction

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Welcome to the Weekly Writing Prompt from The Ink Well

We provide one weekly writing prompt for short story writers. You may choose to use the prompt to write a fictional story (made up from your imagination) or a creative nonfiction story (based on your real life experiences).

IMPORTANT: To be considered for curation, you must include one of these tags on your post:

It is also very helpful to the admin team when authors add Fiction or Creative Nonfiction (or CNF for short) to the story title!

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Before You Post in The Ink Well

Be sure to check out our community rules before posting in this community. You can find them at the top of our

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Please also check out these additional helpful resources:

  • Learn more about our community and the expectations of community members in our
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  • Peruse our collection of great writing resources on everything from character development to how to write dialogue in our
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  • Learn more about creative nonfiction, how it differs from fictional stories, and tips for success in
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  • Remember that we are always about quality first. Never about quantity. To achieve awards in The Ink Well, take the time to write quality stories and check them for errors. See the topic of the month, "Don't Miss This Step" in the March 2025 newsletter to learn about using tools (and using them properly) if you are not already doing this. We do notice when you don't take the time!

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Last Week's Winning Story of the Week

Thank you to everyone who shared a story for the last prompt, "

"!

Each week we pick one of our favorite stories of the week and award the author 5 Hive.

And we have a winner! Congrats to @delightedpen for her story

The Fool I Became
.

Here's what our curator had to say:

@delightedpen offers a well-constructed story in response to the fool prompt. She opens with a scene from the point of view of a sixteen-year-old girl. She is where she should not be. A confrontation with another woman tells her that — the man she is out with is cheating on the other woman, with her. When she rushes home, she ends up in front of parents who are astonished at her behavior. It seems she learned a valuable lesson..

Congratulations, @delightedpen!

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Short Story Writing Prompt of the Week

This week's prompt is: "The things we didn't say."

Unspoken words can be profound, sometimes speaking even louder than words. A person can say many things with just a look!

"The things we didn't say" has many other possibilities too. Perhaps someone wishes they had said something important before a family member passed away. Or a terrible misunderstanding leads to a breakup between two people who love each other, and it's many years later that they both discover the mistake. And of course the featured image on this post could inspire some ideas. What words should have been spoken before a betrothed couple found themselves at the altar?

Here are some fictional story ideas generated by ChatGPT:

The Unsent Letters
After their mother’s death, two estranged siblings discover a box of letters she wrote but never mailed, each addressed to someone she once loved. As they read, they begin to piece together a hidden emotional life that explains her silences, regrets, and distant kindness, forcing them to confront their own unspoken truths about family, resentment, and love.

The Last Shift
On the final night of a small-town diner before it closes, a weary waitress and a regular customer — who’ve exchanged small talk for years — finally drift into deeper conversation. What emerges are the confessions, apologies, and truths they never dared speak, revealing how two strangers quietly shaped each other’s lives without ever acknowledging it.

And here are some AI generated ideas for creative nonfiction short stories based on this prompt:

Conversations That Only Happened in My Head
A reflective essay cataloging all the things the narrator never said—to a dying grandparent, a former best friend, a first love, a disappointed parent—exploring how silence can protect, wound, and linger long after the moment has passed.

The Apologies I Carried
A personal meditation on the regrets, explanations, and emotional truths the writer rehearsed internally but never voiced, examining how these unsaid words shaped later choices, relationships, and self-understanding.

We hope those ideas inspire you! Use this prompt as you wish in a fictional story or a creative nonfiction story. As always, you do not need to actually use the prompt word(s). They are here to inspire your creativity!

We look forward to reading the product of your imagination or your memories!

Good luck! And of course, you are welcome to use AI to generate ideas and images, but the writing must be your own! We do not accept stories that are AI-generated or heavily edited by AI. Only use tools like Grammarly to fix spelling and grammar issues.

Remember, as always, we are looking for the elements of story. These include:

  • Great first lines
  • Good settings
  • Well-developed characters
  • Integration of action, dialogue and narrative
  • A conflict that intrigues the reader
  • A "story arc" which results in the resolution of the conflict and brings the story to a satisfying conclusion
  • And of course, we are looking for well-edited stories that are not littered with typos or grammatical errors — please use the free Grammarly tool for grammar and spelling checks (and not AI writing or rephrasing tools for revising)

You can find more on all of these topics in the

.

If you don't feel inspired by this prompt or the featured image, feel free to peruse any of our past prompts or our collection of idea-generators:

Rules:

  1. Accepted content: Remember that we only accept short stories (fiction or creative nonfiction). We do not accept advice columns, personal development articles, reviews, chapter stories, recipes, etc. We also do not accept posts about violent, gory, bloody, brutal, sexist or racist themes, NSFW (not safe for work) stories like erotica, stories with a political or religious agenda, or stories featuring abuse of any kind. (We have a complete article about

    for more information.) And do NOT use AI tools to write or manipulate your stories. You must provide your own unique content.

  2. Post link: Please be sure to publish your story in

    community, and post a link to your story in a comment on this post.

  3. Hashtags: Use the #fiction tag for fictional stories and the #creativenonfiction tag for creative nonfiction stories. You can also use #writing, #inkwellprompt and #theinkwell.

  4. Images: Please only use images from license free and creative commons sites, like Pixabay, Unsplash and Pexels. You can also generate them with AI tools. Images you find on the Internet are copyright protected and cannot be used. Be sure to provide all image source links.

  5. Length: We request that story word counts are a maximum of 1,500 words in length and ideally 750-1000 words. This is just a guideline. Longer stories are okay too, but they tend to get fewer readers. Additionally, The Ink Well admins appreciate keeping to that maximum story length for our time management. (Note: We generally consider stories less than 750 words "too short" and they tend to be missing important character development. See the "story length" topic of our

    for resources on how to improve and further develop your stories.)

  6. Translations: If you post a story that has been translated from another language, please include the English version first, followed by content in the original language.

  7. Community support: When you post in The Ink Well, please be sure to visit the work of at least two other community members and comment on their work.

Past Prompts

After 241 straight weeks of fiction prompts (and nearly as many creative nonfiction prompts) we have started a fresh new series! If you'd like to see the full list of previous fiction prompts, you can find them at the bottom of

.

Thank you for being a part of The Ink Well!
@jayna, @gracielaacevedo, @agmoore, @samsmith1971, @itsostylish and @yaziris.

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