DailyPrompt Deviousness · 6 June 2026

It seems devious to me that DailyPrompt gets daily prompts from their users by having competitions for daily prompts.
Okay. Devious is definitely an overstatement, but the ploy is very clever. Think about it. You have all these writers out there who are submitting pieces to DailyPrompt. They want to win competitions. They like different prompts for different genres. For prose. For poetry. So why not give those writers prompts from their peers? It is very clever.
Oh sure, they give out prizes, but think about all the prompts they get for so few dollars. (Although I am not sure how they make their money for prizes. In fact, I am baffled by their business plan. Not that I know their business plan, but they obviously get their money from somewhere.)
At any rate.
I think it is a brilliant idea to get the very prompts they use on their site from the people who are members of their site. Simply brilliant.
I, for one, like to submit entries to each competition. Every single one. I do not think I have missed one since I subscribed. Which is actually the reason I subscribed. (And no. I do not get anything from DailyPrompt if you subscribe. But I should. I promote them enough.)
At any rate.
I subscribed to DailyPrompt.com for the possibility of winning back my subscription cost. All I needed to do was win a competition or two and I would pay for my lifetime subscription. (Did I mention that I have no idea what their business plan is?) And I did. I won early! But alas, not often. In fact, I have only won one time. Which is okay. I won my subscription cost back. Which is all I really wanted to do. That and write pieces that fit a bunch of different prompts.

Needless to say, I enjoy writing. And whether I am writing for myself and my readers or writing for a daily prompt, I just keep on writing. And I will keep doing so for as long as my mind and body are around. Whether anybody else reads what I am doing or not. Whether anybody else likes what I am doing or not.
Well, I know this is a short post, but it says what I wanted to say. And I am not one to keep writing to add fluff to a piece just because I did not meet my word count quota. Which, by the way, I do not have. A quota, that is.
So devious or not, I think it is great that DailyPrompt uses competitions to get more daily prompts.
© 2026 Michael T. Miyoshi
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Christmas Eve Anticipation · 30 May 2026

We say our prayers and go to bed
Expectant on Christmas Eve
We are waiting for Santa Claus
And all the presents he will leave.
But the reality of Saint Nicholas
Does not matter much at all
For the members of our family
Give each other our all in all.
So as we wait for something special
While we sleep on Christmas Eve
Not really waiting for Santa Claus
And the presents he might leave.
In truth all of our waiting
For the warmth on Christmas morn
Is the celebration that we all will have
Of the day that Christ was born.
[Write a story or poem about needing to wait for something special.
DailyPrompt prompt submitted by Michael T. Miyoshi.]
I know that it is nowhere near Christmas Eve, but I was so excited that one of my prompts I submitted to DailyPrompt.com was used as a prompt that I had to write a poem for the prompt and I had to share it with you.
© 2026 Michael T. Miyoshi
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Inspiration Strikes · 23 May 2026

I recently got a fortune from a fortune cookie that said:
“Follow the trail of inspiration; it leads to greatness.”
Poppycock!
I think that inspiration is great. I think it can lead lots of places. But I also think that we place too much emphasis on inspiration. And when we think that inspiration is the is all to end all, we are in for trouble. Especially, if we are writers.
Now, I am not saying that people should not follow inspiration. They often should. It might even lead to greatness. But many people think that they need to wait to be inspired to do any work. They think that inspiration will strike like lightning and they will automatically be great if they follow that inspiration strike. The problem with this mentality is that people often wait and wait and wait. It is as if there is no cloud in the sky, but these people are going to wait for the lightning to come. But it rarely comes for those who just wait for it. Just like lightning rarely strikes out of a blue sky.
Personally, I think that inspiration strikes when we are working. When we are doing what we need to do. When we are busy doing anything but waiting. For the work is what inspires us. “What if I did it a different way? What if there was some tool for that? What if…” These questions do not come about when a person waits for inspiration, they come about when a person is working. When a person is doing what he or she is supposed to be doing.
The inspiration lightning strikes more often for those people busy doing what they are supposed to be doing than for those who are waiting. I suppose that is because there are often storm clouds looming. Deadlines and pressure tend to bring those clouds into view. And then, the lightning strikes. From those dark, stormy clouds.
I used to write like that. Waiting for inspiration. In fact, I would mostly write when life got me down. When there was a great loss. Usually death. I sometimes even despaired of writing because inspiration only seemed to strike when a loved one died. I wrote a poem or a song or a remembrance of that loved one. But I wrote it too late. I wrote the odes when my loved ones were not around to hear the words.

Which is why I write nearly every day. Or at least part of why I write on such a schedule. I do not want to wait for death or destruction or calamity to strike before I write. Before I am inspired. I want to write about the mundane as well as the inspirational.
I do think that inspiration is a marvelous thing. I look forward to it happening on those rare or even not so rare occasions. And yes. Sometimes we really ought to follow that inspiration. But we should never wait for inspiration. We should work diligently and inspiration will strike. Sometimes from the most mundane things. Sometimes from a silly fortune cookie.
© 2026 Michael T. Miyoshi
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