National Poetry Month Prompts – Week Four

The final set of prompts for your writing enjoyment. Special thanks to Danielle Reed, the Girl Genius, for coming up with these!

Day Twenty-Three: Things I’d like to forget

Day Twenty-Four: Say the quiet part out loud

Day Twenty-Five: Things that have disappeared

Day Twenty-Six: That’s not the way I remember it– write about the Mandela effect

Day Twenty-Seven: What are you fighting right now?

Day Twenty-Eight: Write about the person or object sitting directly to your right or left

Day Twenty-Nine: Go through your drafts. Find a word you’ve used at least three times. Write a poem about that word, but don’t use the actual word

Day Thirty: Over it. What are you over right now?

National Poetry Month Prompts – Week Three

Here are the next set of prompts:

Day Sixteen: Write a poem about something that would normally be terrible but make the poem a happy one.

Day Seventeen: Write about a sign, omen, or warning.

Day Eighteen: Short phrases – no more than 5 words per line.

Day Nineteen: Write the apology YOU deserve.

Day Twenty: Some say the world will end in _____.

Day Twenty-One: I would prefer if we didn’t _______.

Day Twenty-Two: Things I wish I could remember.

National Poetry Month Prompts – Week Two

Here are the next set of prompts for the first half of the month.

Day Eight: Use an image as your inspiration for today’s poem.

Day Nine: Write a poem with a cliffhanger.

Day Ten: Write a poem where you are a tour guide to someplace/something unusual (real or imaginary).

Day Eleven: Monsters are real and I have proof…

Day Twelve: Write about a specific object or objects in your bag.

Day Thirteen: Write a poem describing a sound you hate.

Day Fourteen: A poem about the human heart.

Day Fifteen: Find 5-10 random facts. Pick 1 and use it as the base of your poem.

National Poetry Month Prompts – Week One

These prompts are courtesy of Danielle Reed, The Girl Genius. Follow her here to see them as they post.

Day One: Write a poem where the first (or last) line uses a word or phrase from a passing conversation between you and a stranger.

Day Two: Write a love poem. (Love of anything… not necessarily romantic love.)

Day Three: Write a haiku string (3 or more) about different ways to say goodbye.

Day Four: Write an erotic poem.

Day Five: Pick a number 1-26. Pick the letter of the alphabet that corresponds to that number. Write a poem where the first word of every line starts with that letter.

Day Six: Write about the current political situation from a non-human perspective.

Day Seven: Write a break up poem where you’re breaking up with something instead of someone.

Self-Care Creativity: Falling Behind…

We apologize for falling behind in our creativity prompts. We have been relocating our creative space. 

We hope you are continuing to practice self-care creativity. Get into your creative happy place. If you can’t get there describe it. Use all of your creative senses.

Self-Care Creativity Day 10

Create an ode to your muse using the format that you are most comfortable with… or the one your muse tells you to use. 

Self-Care Creativity Day 9

What is your creative mission? What is your purpose? Are they the same? How can you express them creatively? Write a poem, story, or essay. Take a picture. Make a collage. Paint a picture. Whatever your form of creative expression, use it to express your mission and/or purpose. 

Self-Care Creativity – Day 8

Explore a different perspective. Look at things from a different angle. Dare to allow yourself to come from a different creative space. 

Self-Care Creativity Day 7

Turn a creative weakness into a strength.

How? Practice.

Need a different option? Use your creativity to convince someone who doesn’t know you that your weakness is actually your strength. 

Self-Care Creativity Day 6

Don’t just think outside idea of the box… create as if there is no box.

Step outside of the traditional structure of your particular form of creativity.