Tag: weekly writing prompts
Common Ground
Do you have any talents, hobbies, or favorite pastimes in common with your parents or grandparents? Think about a love for the outdoors, music, writing, or gardening. The list of possibilities is endless! Be sure to share your tales! Continue reading “Common Ground”
Starting Over –Week 12
“Toto, I have a feeling we’re not in Kansas anymore.”
― L. Frank Baum
Share a tale about a new beginning. What will your story be?
Family Photo — Week 11
“Photography is the story I fail to put into words.”
— Destin Sparks
My Island Home
At the age of four, my family moved to Alameda, California. This little island tucked away in the San Francisco Bay showcased many Victorian homes. These beauties included everything from quaint cottages to astounding mansions and varying sizes in between. While living on the island, children that lived in these houses, often told wild tales about secret rooms or spoke of hidden treasure. My brothers and I would often search for hidden rooms and fortune too. When I was five or six, I did find a prize, an antique teapot from Holland. Continue reading “My Island Home”
Warm & Fuzzy–Week Nine
Peace is the beauty of life. It is sunshine. It is the smile of a child, the love of a mother, the joy of a father, the togetherness of a family. It is the advancement of man, the victory of a just cause, the triumph of truth.–Menachem Begin
April Themes
Come join in the fun and share your family stories. Do not forget to add your story to the comments section. Continue reading “April Themes”
A Cherished Heirloom–Week Eight
My favorite things often have a story behind them and are usually handmade or discovered at a flea market.–Amy Sedaris
Love’s Season
After leaving the taco stand at 12:15 in the morning, I found myself questioning my sanity. My part-time job drained me, especially knowing I’d have to face my daytime shift at 7:00 a.m. But the quiet walk home always helped. The stillness of the night cleared my head, letting me leave behind the chaos of the evening. Once home, a hot shower would soothe my thoughts, preparing me for a few precious hours of sleep.
But that night was different.
You caught me off guard, standing outside the door without your usual ride—just you. Instinctively, I scanned the street, half-expecting to see your car parked nearby. You noticed and smiled, a hint of mischief in your eyes. “Not tonight,” you said, your voice soft but filled with intent. “Tonight, I wanted to walk you home.”
In an instant, the exhaustion of the day melted away. When you reached for my hand, the chill in the fall air no longer mattered. There was a warmth that came with you, a quiet comfort that had grown over the past few months. Our easy flirting and shared moments had become a source of joy in my life, a spark in my otherwise monotonous days. Although we hadn’t known each other long, being with you felt familiar, like coming home.
We had talked about the future, about going to school together next year. You even considered switching universities just so we could stay close. Every step we took down Main Street in Canon City that night felt like a step toward something bigger—something ours.
As we walked and laughed, we came upon the middle school. Earlier in the day, someone had raked the fallen leaves into a massive, inviting pile. You gave me a playful grin, grabbed my hand, and we sprinted toward it like kids set loose on recess. We jumped into the middle, and the leaves exploded around us, raining down in a riot of red, gold, and orange.
Amid the laughter, you took my face gently in your hands and kissed me, slow and deliberate, as though time had stopped for just us. My heart raced as the kisses deepened, the crisp autumn air mingling with the warmth of your touch. We lay back in the pile of leaves, and you brushed a strand of hair from my face, smiling in that way you always did.
In that moment, looking into your eyes, I knew: I had fallen in love with you.
Though we didn’t find our “happily ever after,” I still think of you from time to time. Even after all these years, the memory of those precious days lingers. In my heart, I believe you smile when you stumble upon a pile of autumn leaves, just as I do—remembering a brown-eyed girl and a night when the world seemed to pause for us.
And every autumn, when I pass a pile of fallen leaves, I can’t help but smile. I like to believe that somewhere, you do the same—that you remember the brown-eyed girl, the quiet streets of Cañon City, and the night when the world stilled just long enough for us to fall in love.
.

forever
acknowledge
love
laughter
life.
Enchanting
autumn ~
vibrant
earthy
salvation.
mnemonic – The Daily Prompt
First kiss –Week 6
“I think Heaven will be like a first kiss.”
― Sarah Addison Allen, The Sugar Queen Continue reading “First kiss –Week 6”










