Title: Magical Fandom: FAKE Author: badly_knitted Characters: Dee, Ryo. Rating: PG Written For: Challenge 496: Mist. Setting: After the manga. Summary: It’s a magical morning in the forest. Disclaimer: I don’t own FAKE, or the characters. They belong to the wonderful Sanami Matoh. A/N: Double drabble.
This section is for nuisances, small aggravations, learning curve,and problems that are probably fixable, but not yet fixed. Compared to the other two posts, it's all small stuff. But many a mickle makes a muckle - and there's a lot in this category.
I'm posting it a bit late, and may have forgotten some of the things I intended to include two weeks ago.
Canonical has (a) decided to use snaps for key components of their linux distribution (Ubuntu, Kubuntu etc.). As the developer of the snap packaging system it's also decided to make snaps forcibly update themselves. Firefox arrives as a snap, and has new versions approximately every two weeks.
Mozilla has gone all in on Chatbot support. This is quite controversial among Firefox users, some of whom have flamed Mozilla up down and sideways on their forums.
I'm rather disgusted myself. I encounter enough human-written lies, damn lies, and confabulations; I don't need an extra serving of confabulations ("hallucinations") from my web browser.
Checking out alternative web browsers is on my backburner, but I don't expect to find anything substantially better. Chromium has Google cooties all over it, giving me a serious feeling of caveat emptor.
Oops, I got interrupted when responding to check-ins on Day 3 and forgot to finish them. So some of my comments will be out of synch, sorry!
Quote of the Day:
"If anybody asks me what I have accomplished, I will say all I have accomplished is that I have written a few good sentences."
— Eric Hoffer
My Check-In:
More Neverending Project… All the prompts people offered sound intriguing, thanks! And dswdiane, the Princess and the Pea on The Couch is hilarious. I've already got several lines for that! 8-)
New mixtape alert 🚨 “Light Mix” now has a companion side, built from the Admiral’s gentle nudge for friendlier, at‑home listening. Side B leans warm, bright, and easy—perfect for cooking, puttering, or just letting the afternoon drift by. A softer spin, same sunny spirit. C-90 tape length.
Side A — Light Mix
Side B — The Bright Side
Wouldn’t It Be Nice — 02:25
Be My Baby (The Ronettes) — 02:40
Mamma Mia — 03:32
Breakaway (Jackie DeShannon) — 02:16
Walk Like an Egyptian — 03:24
Brother Love’s Travelling Salvation Show (Neil Diamond) — 03:29
[ If you're interested in being a Tuesday-Thursday guest host, you can sign up here. Thanks! ❤ ] ↑↑↑ Available dates: April 7 & 9 April 14 & 16 April 21 & 23
Hi! ^.^ It's time for this week's Lonely Prompts adoption day. If this is your first time at comment_fic on a Sunday, you can either request previous prompts to be filled or share your recent fills for prompts. (Or do both, of course!) ✎
How to look for prompts: We have plenty of prompts that might just nibble away at your brain today. You can browse through the comm's calendar archive (here on LJ or here on DW) for themed and Free For All posts, or perhaps check out Sunday posts for Lonely Prompt requests. (Or, you can be like me, and try to save interesting prompts as you see 'em... and then end up with multiple text doc files full of [themes + links + prompts] that you can easily look through and search for keywords.) Multiple fills for one prompt are welcome, by the way! Oh, and you are very likely to find some awesome fills to read as well, and wouldn't it be nice to leave a comment on those lovely little writing distractions? ~_^
Whichever you decide to do, prompt or fill (or both), please remember: 1. You can only request five prompts to be filled. 2. You can request no more than three prompts from a particular fandom. 3. You can, however, fill as many prompts in as many fandoms as you'd like! 4. In the subject line, be sure to say whether it is a request or a fill! 5. You must link back to wherever the prompt is in the community archive (whether filling or requesting), and, if you're filling the prompt, please post the fill as a reply to the original prompt. 6. If you are filling an "any/any" prompt, please let us know what fandom you've written it for (or if it's original!). 8. If there are possible triggers in your story, please warn for them in the subject line! 7. If you've filled any lonely prompts in the past week, this is the place to share them! 9. Finally, please remember to add your prompt fills to our AO3 collection: Bite Sized Bits of Fic from 2026 collection. See further notes on this option here.
If you are viewing this post on our Dreamwidth site: please know that fills posted here will not show up as comments on our LiveJournal site, but you are still more than welcome to participate. =)
If you have a Dreamwidth account and would feel more comfortable participating there, please feel free to do so… and spread the word! comment_fic
A friendly reminder about our posting schedule: Themed posts for new prompts go up on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Saturdays are a Free for All day for new prompts of any flavor. Sundays are for showing Lonely Prompts some love, whether by requesting for someone to adopt them or by sharing any fills that you've recently completed.
One Easter tradition around here is kids. Little ones and big ones. We get a few every weekend but on Easter, it's like a kid convention. There were clearly a bunch in the pool yesterday - it wasn't as bad as I've seen it but clearly... No big deal, just different. The other person there this morning was walking to help loosen up her back "I have very small grandchildren coming today and I want to be able to move." And, also, as I pointed out yesterday, around here, mentioning very young grandchildren is a way to brag about how young you are!
They are having a massive Easter brunch and I walked by the dining rooms on my way back this morning. All the tables are set and ready and they each have a napkin folded into a bunny. Very cute.
Last night's baseball game had a feature... The Angels have an outfielder who is good at the bat but very meh on defense. During the early innings, he caught a fly ball that would have surely been a home run. He leaped up and grabbed it as it went over the fence. Very impressive and he was, of course, delighted. And then later in the game, he did it again!! Now this is a 1-0 game. And the 1 was not ours. We needed those fucking home runs. But, 2 catches like that in a game, ya gotta respect. As we got to the end of the game, our shortstop him a ball out of the park - this time over a low fence with spectators sitting there, but this same outfielder ran and reached and went completely over the wall into the lap of one of those spectators and disappeared from view... and then, rose up... with the ball and a grin that had zero stoppage.
I hate that we lost the game - especially that way - but ya just gotta love that one human, and one who has not had a lot of success, has a night like that. I hope he celebrated so hard that he cannot fucking walk today.
And speaking of walking, I would like to note that my foot - the one that needed two more steroid shots recently - is now enjoying a bout of painlessness. It's such a joy to put on shoes and not have shooting pain. It took longer for the shots to work their magic this time but magic it is. woot!
Time to watch my Sunday Morning TV. Game this afternoon. More hens to make.
Six sentences (actually six this time! I can count!) from the next chapter of The Secret Marriage:
"You call Svetlana first," Shane says. "I still have to work out what I'm going to tell Hayden."
They're sitting side by side on the bed, backs against the headboard, but, unusually for Shane when in this bed in particular, his attention is not focused on Ilya. He has a paper notepad balanced against his knees, and he's spent the past few minutes jotting down bullet points and then crossing them out again. Now he has a list titled 'Tell Hayden', followed by about half a page of scribble.
"You just tell him the truth," Ilya says, letting his hand stray onto Shane's thigh.
Which dish is more suited for Easter than a carrot cake? None, I say! And lucky for y’all, I have the best recipe for you to try. This recipe is tried and true and absolutely delicious. Many people have said “this is the best carrot cake I’ve ever had!”
This Brown Butter Carrot Cake comes to us from Handle the Heat. It’s surprisingly quick and honestly quite easy, and it’s my go-to carrot cake recipe, even though browning the butter takes some extra time. It’s totally worth it!
I hope you give this recipe a try, and have a happy Easter, or just an awesome Sunday in general.
The rows of daffodils that you can see from the front window.
I got out the lensbaby Trio lens this morning and was experimented with it. Life always feels exciting when I get a different lens on the camera, or I get out a different camera. The Trio has a velvet lens, a sweet lens and a twist lens built into the one mount. I think I like the twist best. You can get good close ups with this lens so I think I'll keep it on the camera for a while and try and find some flowers later. I especially like this lens because it is so flat and can fit into a bag easily.
Our eggs yesterday. That green one on the far left is from Blondie, one of the older chickens. She still lays eggs regularly. Dorothy (an older hen too) still lays (a white egg, not shown) though that is rare. The other 4 eggs are all from the chicks born last spring. We have so many eggs right now!
But for now I need to get busy a-cook'n and a-clean'n for company coming. 5 hours before the family gets here. I need to get dressed and get going.
Over on her site there's a companion egg cake with a slice out, though, and there are 4 or 5 layers in there! Swooning over the soft colors and that perfect flower swag.
The deadline has passed! We have 6 pinch hits that need to be filled.
Due Wed 8 Apr 17:00 CEST (in your timezone | countdown) negotiable. To claim, comment on this post with your AO3 username and the pinch hit you want to claim.
Here are items with dates between Sunday, April 5th and Saturday, April 11th, as well as items added recently that started this past week. Remember, you can comment here on new items that need to be added to the list. Items starting since the last update & this coming week
More than the fuchsia funnels breaking out of the crabapple tree, more than the neighbor’s almost obscene display of cherry limbs shoving their cotton candy-colored blossoms to the slate sky of spring rains, it’s the greening of the trees that really gets to me. When all the shock of white and taffy, the world’s baubles and trinkets, leave the pavement strewn with the confetti of aftermath, the leaves come. Patient, plodding, a green skin growing over whatever winter did to us, a return to the strange idea of continuous living despite the mess of us, the hurt, the empty. Fine then, I’ll take it, the tree seems to say, a new slick leaf unfurling like a fist, I’ll take it all.
Fandom: GOTH - Otsuichi Rating: T Length: 100 words Content notes: none Author notes: The title is from The house and the birds by Sonia Bueno, translated by James Womack. Summary: Kamiyama thinks that other teenaged boys have no taste.
I’m old enough to remember when scallop shells—like the little jam dish in the photo—pulled double duty as ashtrays in diners and backwoods cabins. A single half shell would sit on the table, overflowing with cigarette butts, a lone smoke balanced on the edge as if it had claimed the spot. It wasn’t pretty, but it was part of the landscape: coffee rings, bacon grease, and the low murmur of conversations drifting through the haze. Funny how one humble shell can summon an entire era, long after the last ember faded.
One of my favourite arcs from Haikyu!! is the Tokyo training camp. Everyone in the Karasuno team is working on different ways to level up their game. Except for Tsukishima, who's always been kind of detached and cynical in his attitude. (We find out why when we get his Traumatic Backstory Reveal.)
But even he starts to wonder, what makes everyone else work so hard, at something that's just a high school extracurricular?
Cue the entrance of two of the Tokyo team captains, Kuroo and Bokuto, who mentor him in different ways - and kick off a character arc that pays off so satisfyingly later, in one of the most awesome moments of the story.
Anyway. It was really cool to see this sequence brought to life in the stage play!
Happy Easter to all who celebrate, and a nice relaxing Sunday to everyone else! :-)
Easter service was outside surrounded by forest, and I can now tell you the trees are very much in bloom indeed. I went through several tissues and every time one of the frequent gusts of wind came I had an almighty sneezing fit. I hope it was clear to everyone around me that I do not have the plague, I just have an immune system that thinks it must protect me from the mortal danger coming from all the evil tree pollen. Before service there was shared breakfast for those who wanted. I decided to be a bit more social and attend that, too, and felt astonishingly little awkward even though as usual I mostly lurked and nibbled at the offerings. Had a chat with the pastor who now finally knows where to place me, the now closed library she used to visit, so that mystery is solved. ;-) And discovered while my finger seems mostly fine I have a hard time opening bottles with it - since my fluid intake consists of tea at home I hadn't noticed, but now actually had to ask for help for that. Got some flowers from the decoration that now decorate my table while I am on the couch waiting for my immune system to realize the horrors of the evil pollen from hell are over.
1. Have you ever been fooled by an ‘April Fool’s Day’ joke?
I usually forget it's April 1st and so I have fallen for them frequently. This year it was a fannish one. A while ago the makers of the Drei Fragezeichen audioplay series published an instagram thing for fun where the actors did a scene in current youth language, and on April 1st they wrote due to popular demand they were doing an entire episode like that. Guess who went looking if that one could already be preordered. And only had the penny drop when someone referred to that on Tumblr.
2. Do you prefer sweet things or savoury things to eat?
I prefer savoury things.
3. Do other people shorten your given name? Do you shorten your own name?
No. I think the common way to shorten my first name wouldn't really fit me actually. Many people in real life call me by my middle name, I wouldn't mind that to be shortened to the common short form - well, at least if we are close - but noone does. My Mom called me by her own version of that though, which is the reason why my middle name is so much in use in real life, little me initially imprinted onto that one. ;-)
4. Are there opportunities to go walking where you live? Do you take advantage of that?
The aforementioned forest is two minutes from my home. You can take very nice walks there, but if you are me you can also very easily get lost by somehow walking in circles in what is a really very urban forest. :-D I occasionally take advantage of that - if I have the time to get lost for a while ;-) - but not as often as I should to get a bit more fresh air and exercise. There is also a really lovely walk with a great view in the next district, which I hope to find the energy to do again this spring.
5. Pineapple on a pizza – yes, or no?
Um. Ok-ish? I'd try if there isn't a more tempting option, but have not yet.
Some DX catches arrive with fanfare; others slip in quietly, almost shyly. This morning’s surprise belonged to the second category. Around 05:33 ADT, while sweeping the upper end of the AM band, I landed on 1660 kHz and heard something that didn’t belong: music. Not sports, not talk, not the usual expanded‑band clutter — actual music, faint but unmistakable at S1.
That single detail narrows the field to one station: WGIT “Faro de Santidad” in Canóvanas, Puerto Rico, roughly 2,600 kilometers away. They’re one of the only 1660 outlets running music overnight, and their Spanish Christian format often rides the Caribbean–Atlantic path when conditions cooperate.
The signal had that classic tropical texture — steady carrier, fragile audio, fading as sunrise approached. Within minutes I moved in to search for other stations. But for a moment, Puerto Rico made the trip north, and that’s the kind of magic that keeps me tuning.
1. I got more sleep last night than the night before and fell asleep right away, but the total was still only like 5-5.5 hours max. Hopefully tonight will be more.
2. We had a really fun day today with nintendoh and his husband. Cherry blossom viewing at Osaka Castle and then lunch at an okonomiyaki place and karaoke after that. None of us had been karaoke in years and this was a reminder of how much I enjoy it. It also provided a really nice way to relax after getting too much sun at the castle (the forecast had promised overcast weather all day so we did not put on sunblock or bring hats, which was a mistake as it was not overcast during the whole midday period that we were out).
3. Alex sent us lots of cat pics today again. I miss them so much but I’m glad they seem more settled this time.
Another Three Sentence Ficathon 2025 drabble, this time about Darla from the Buffyverse.
Title:a slayer unborn. Fandom: Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Character/Pairing: Darla. Rating/Warnings: M, none. Summary: For the prompt: "Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Darla, Slayer!Darla." Word count: 100.
read more -
The new strength coursing through her veins is exhilarating, and she can’t get enough of it; enough of the safety and the power it brings, for her and for the other girls.
That stuffy, old British man, coming to her spouting about grand destinies and duties… as if she hasn’t known men like him before; as if she can’t read them, their expectations, their entitlement; she plays along as well as ever, but she won’t serve him or any other man again.
A deformed figure, covered in priest robes, watches her from the dark; it goes unnoticed, in her reverie.
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Enter a Murderer - Ngaio Marsh Hornblower and the Hotspur - C. S. Forester How I Killed Pluto and Why It Had It Coming - Mike Brown Midnight Timetable - Bora Chung, transl. Anton Hur Diary of a Cranky Bookworm - Aster Glenn Gray Ghost Cities - Siang Liu Land of Milk and Honey - C Pam Zhang HMS Surprise - Patrick O'Brian Nightwing Vol 1: On with the Show - Dan Watters, Dexter Soy, Veronica Gandini Absolute Batman Vol 1 : The Zoo - Scott Snyder, Nick Dragotta, Frank Martin
In the fall of 2004, Frank came up with an idea for a project. After he finished delivering documents for the day, he’d drive through the darkened streets of Washington, D.C., with stacks of self-addressed postcards—three thousand in total. At metro stops, he’d approach strangers. “Hi,” he’d say. “I’m Frank. And I collect secrets.” Some people shrugged him off, or told him they didn’t have any secrets. Surely, Frank thought, those people had the best ones. Others were amused, or intrigued. They took cards and, following instructions he’d left next to the address, decorated them, wrote down secrets they’d never told anyone before, and mailed them back to Frank. All the secrets were anonymous.
Initially, Frank received about one hundred postcards back. They told stories of infidelity, longing, abuse. Some were erotic. Some were funny. He displayed them at a local art exhibition and included an anonymous secret of his own. After the exhibition ended, though, the postcards kept coming. By 2024, Frank would have more than a million.
After his exhibit closed, the postcards took over Frank’s life. Hundreds poured into his mailbox, week after week. He decided to create a website, PostSecret, where every Sunday he uploaded images of postcards he’d received in the mail.
The website is a simple, ad-free blog with a black background, the 4×6 rectangular confessions emerging from the darkness like faces illuminated around a campfire. Frank is careful to keep himself out of the project—he thinks of the anonymous postcard writers as the project’s authors—so there’s no commentary. Yet curation is what makes PostSecret art. There’s a dream logic to the postcards’ sequence, like walking through a surrealist painting, from light to dark to absurd to profound.
I’m afraid that one day, we’ll find out TOMS are made by a bunch of slave kids!
I am a man. After an injury my hormones got screwed up and my breasts started to grow. I can’t tell anyone this but: I really like having tits.
I’m in love with a murderer… but I’ve never felt safer in anyone else’s arms.
I cannot relax in my bathtub because I have an irrational fear that it’s going to fall through the floor.
Even if you don’t see him on the website, Frank is always present: selecting postcards, placing them in conversation with one another. Off-screen, he’s a lanky, youthful 60-year-old emanating the healthy glow of those who live near the beach. Last August, we met at his house in Laguna Niguel, in a trim suburban neighbourhood a few miles from the ocean; when I asked about his week, he told me his Oura Ring said he’d slept well the night before. He offered me a seat on his back patio, and the din of children playing sports rang out from a park below. His right arm was in a sling. He’d fractured his scapula after a wave slammed him to the sand while he was bodysurfing.
As we spoke, I gathered that his outlook on most everything is positive—disarmingly so. The first time he had a scapula fracture, after a bike accident a few years ago, “I had this sense of release, I would say, from my everyday concerns and burdens,” he said. Physically exhausting himself through endurance exercise is his relief from the postcards, which skew emotionally dark. “I’ve had to become the kind of person that can do this every day,” he told me.
For years, Frank has been interested in postcards as a medium of narrative. Before PostSecret, he had a project he called “The Reluctant Oracle,” in which he placed postcards with messages like Your question is a misunderstood answer into empty bottles and deposited them in a lake near his house. (A Washington Post from the time said “The form is cliche: a message in a bottle,” but called the messages themselves “creepy and alluring.”)
What he considers his earliest postcard project, though, dates from his childhood. When he was in fifth grade, just as he was about to board the bus to camp in the mountains near Los Angeles, his mother handed him three postcards. She told him to write down any interesting experiences he had and mail the cards back home.
Frank took the cards. “It’s a Christian sleep-away camp, so of course a lot of crazy stuff happened, and of course I didn’t write my mom about any of it,” he said. But just before camp ended, he remembered the postcards, jotted something down, and mailed them. When he saw them in the mailbox a few days later, he wondered, Am I the same person that wrote this message days ago? The self, he had observed as a grade schooler, was always in a state of flux.
Examining secrets was part of a lifelong inquiry into what it means to speak. Frank’s parents split up when he was twelve—a shocking and destabilizing event that would define his adolescence. Soon after, he moved with his mother and brother from Southern California to Springfield, Illinois. Messed up by his parents’ divorce and his cross-country move, Frank became anxious and depressed.
While he was in high school, Frank went to a Pentecostal church three or four times a week, searching for a sense of connection with others. At the end of every service, churchgoers would pray at the altar to receive the Holy Spirit. Then, they spoke in tongues. All around him, the Spirit took hold, and people flailed their arms, wept, and danced. Frank looked on with envy and shame. No matter how hard he tried, no matter how many people tried to help him, he never spoke in tongues. It was a spiritual failure, this failure of language.
After college, while living in Virginia, he met a guy named Dave on the basketball court. They became close fast. Dave was funny and sensitive, and also athletic: he and Frank played hundreds of pickup games together. But Dave seemed to be struggling. He was living with his parents, couldn’t land a job. He spent a lot of time on computers, and confided in Frank that he was being bullied online. “You’ve got to get out of here,” Frank told him. That was one of the last things he ever said to Dave. Frank moved to Maryland, and not long after, he got a call from Dave’s father. Dave had killed himself. Frank was crushed. He felt like he should have seen more warning signs, and at the same time, felt helpless. He ruminated on how Dave might have interpreted their final conversation. Out of his parents’ house, he’d meant. Not out of this life.
In the wake of his loss, Frank wanted “to do something useful with his grief,” so he decided to volunteer on a suicide prevention hotline. In training, his supervisors modelled how to inflect his voice to sound non-judgmental, how to ask open-ended questions and get below the surface of everyday conversation—lessons he would carry into his later life. He felt catharsis in listening to other people’s pain, and, in turn, sensed that they appreciated his presence. Simply by talking about their struggles, he found, they sometimes gained new understanding. Once every week or two, Frank listened for six hours, up until late in the quiet of his house, as people unravelled. He let them talk, and he let them stay silent. Listening to people’s confessions in the wee hours of the morning, Frank realized that people needed a way to talk about the messy topics often off limits in everyday conversation.
PostSecret contains echoes of his time volunteering on the suicide prevention hotline. Like the hotline, the project draws attention to the ways people conceal parts of themselves, and encourages disclosure. But the postcards go even further: They’re public, available for anyone to see. They show us the types of stories people normally keep guarded, creating, in the aggregate, a living inventory of our taboos.
What is a secret? Knowledge kept hidden from others, etymologically linked to the words seduction and excrement. To entice someone to look closer; to force them to look away.
Secrecy, writes psychologist Michael Slepian in his 2022 book, The Secret Lives of Secrets, is not an act, but an intention — “I intend,” he writes, “for people not to learn this thing.” “To intend to keep a secret,” he continues, “you need to have a mind capable of reasoning with other minds.” Thus, psychologists believe we start to develop a concept of secrets at around the age of three years old, when we also begin to understand that other people have minds—beliefs, desires, emotions—different from our own. At that point, researchers believe, we also develop the ability to experience self-conscious emotions like guilt, shame, and embarrassment. As our theory of the mind develops, we begin to worry that other people are unable or unwilling to understand us, which, in turn, motivates secrecy. Our teenage years are especially ripe for secret-keeping. As we develop stronger senses of self, we distance ourselves from our parents in a bid to assert control over our lives. Keeping secrets from our parents “allows an escape from [their] criticism, punishment, and anger,” Slepian writes, “but it also precludes the possibility of receiving help when it’s most needed.”
Cultural taboos create secrecy. Systems and structures uphold it. The nature, and content, of secret-keeping varies across cultures, but we have always hidden things from one another. The Greek gods had secret affairs; for centuries, women in central China wrote to each other in a secret language to evade the ire of oppressive husbands. Today, people keep secrets for safety: They conceal medical conditions to receive better insurance coverage, and hide their legal status so they don’t get deported. Even scripture has something to say about secrets, which is, mostly: don’t keep them. Proverbs 28:13 reads, “He who conceals his sins does not prosper, but whoever confesses them and renounces them finds mercy.” God, in other words, wants full disclosure.
We keep secrets because we are ashamed or afraid; we tell them because we want an escape. We want to feel accepted, seen. Naturally, we share some secrets with our friends and partners, but sometimes those relationships are the source of a secret, so instead we seek out neutral interlocutors. A bartender in Las Vegas told me the same client came, week after week, to talk specifically with him about her anxiety and troubled dating life. A hairdresser in Salt Lake City told me that Mormons grappling with their faltering faith came to her, an ex-Mormon, to work through family conflict. A therapist I met in Arkansas observed that many of her clients were leaving Christianity and using therapy as their new religion, which she found “a little spooky.”
When I asked what she meant, she told me that people, ex-Christian or otherwise, often look to therapy to find a source of meaning and release in their life—to fill a spiritual and emotional vacuum. Evangelicalism, she said, values “inappropriate vulnerability,” where people share testimonies and break boundaries in public venues. She’s wary when she hears those same stories within the context of therapy—when clients come in and feel obligated to spill everything up front, then ask for cures to their emotional ailments.
Later, thinking about secrets, I remembered this conversation and the phrase “inappropriate vulnerability.” How much vulnerability with strangers is appropriate? How much is too much?
For a while, PostSecret was my secret. The website existed in the internet nest I made for myself during adolescence, along with sites like fmylife.com, where users each posted a few lines about the tediums and mishaps of their days, often involving anxiety, depression, alcohol, and sex. They were websites that revealed glimpses of how other people lived, where I could gather anecdotes about adult life and begin to construct an idea of how my own world might look one day.
I grew up in Temecula, a California suburb not too far from where Frank currently lives. My friends and I wandered around the mall to try on skinny jeans, and sprinted around after dark to toilet-paper our classmates’ yards. Suburban life often felt stifling, so I had a habit of inventing stories to make my world seem more interesting. I recounted to friends, with narrative flourish, an encounter I’d had with a freshwater shark in an alpine lake. I created a mysterious, dark-haired boyfriend who I’d met at a soccer tournament. I’d never actually had a boyfriend.
Temecula had a distinctly conservative atmosphere, and it was impossible to escape the shame that accompanied any stray thought about boys, or my changing body. Ours was a town where, in 2008, neighbours supported a California ban on gay marriage. Residents protested the city’s first mosque with signs reading “no to sharia law” in 2010. Arsonists set fire to a local abortion clinic in 2017, and, just in the past two years, the school board would ban critical race theory and reject an elementary school curriculum that referenced Harvey Milk. My family went to a Methodist church, but I sometimes went to Mormon dances with friends; at one such dance in middle school, my dress was too short, so a chaperone made me staple cloth to the hem to cover my knees. During slow dances, we held on to boys’ shoulders from an arm’s length away.
Most everyone I knew in Temecula went to church on Sundays. But I found church boring. I’d excuse myself to go to the bathroom and linger there during sermons, counting the flowers on the wallpaper. I didn’t understand how God, who I didn’t see or hear, could exist.
But even if I didn’t believe God was real, my family did, and religious ideas subtly permeated our home life, shaping what we did and did not talk about. We talked about doing well in school and sports; we didn’t talk about our feelings, or puberty, or dating. My body was a secret, softening and bleeding, fascinating and repulsive.
I didn’t really speak to anyone about these changes, though I do remember one car ride to school with a friend. Her mom was driving, and my friend slipped me pieces of paper in the backseat. In her scrunched-up handwriting, she asked: Do you wear bras? Do you have hair down there? When I was a freshman, my period bled through my capris, and upperclassmen stared as I waddled across campus to the cross-country teacher’s classroom for gym shorts, sweat slicking down my back. I’d only ever used thin pads, and I was too anxious to ask about buying tampons. I didn’t want to talk about it, and no one ever asked.
I can barely remember sex ed programming in school; for years, I thought just sleeping next to a boy could get me pregnant. When, in high school, I started the drug Accutane to tame my unruly face, my dermatologist listed off options for pregnancy prevention to avoid harm to an unborn fetus. A family member who was in the room interjected: “She’ll choose abstinence.” It was only after I left and my world opened up that I understood where I came from. That my hometown, and even my own family, bred secrecy.
If I wanted answers to questions—Should I be shaving? Why do I sometimes feel sad?—I had to find them elsewhere. So I swivelled for hours on an office chair in front of a wheezing PC. It was here I learned of Frank’s work.
I remember the glow of the monitor in the dark upstairs hallway, the feeling of the mouse under my hand as I scrolled through secrets. I remember the padding of feet on stairs, the quick click of the X. Browser window vanished.
Over the years, Frank has developed a process for selecting secrets. He sorts the most promising ones into a few boxes. A good secret involves a particular alchemy of art and content. He likes secrets he’s never heard before—there are fewer and fewer these days, but every once in a while something new will pop up—and secrets he has seen but which are presented in a surprising way. At this point, twenty years after the project began, he mostly relies on intuition to select those he posts to the website. He’s kept every postcard over the years, even during a cross-country move. (The secrets he’s posted in the past decade are stored in his upstairs closet and garage; the rest are mostly on loan to the Museum of Us, in San Diego.) Every postcard, that is, except one. He blames a relative for losing it.
On the website, the scrolling experience is simple enough—scroll, rectangle, scroll, next rectangle—but within the rectangles, something else is happening: a cacophony of colour, scrawl, scribble, cross-outs, stickers, stamps, maps, photographs, sketches. Once, I saw locks of hair taped to a postcard; the writer said they collected the hair of children they babysat. The spectre of tactility, if not tactility itself, reminds the viewer that there are thousands of people behind these postcards, and thousands of hours over the course of twenty years were spent creating them.
Is this sociology? Psychology? Voyeurism? The postcards are shaped like little windows, glimpses into someone’s life, devoid of context. Frank likes to think of them, in the collective, as a cross-section of human nature, and each week he tries to select a range of moods, including a smattering of lighthearted secrets to round out his postcard representation of the psyche, even though most of what he receives is dark. I wondered if reading all these secrets gave him some sort of unique lens into who we are, but he’s not sure. Everyone has different parts of themselves or their lives that they’re afraid to acknowledge. Today, most secrets he receives are about relationships—either feeling dissatisfied with a partner or revolving around loneliness.
“My hope is when people read the secrets each week they have no idea what I think about religion, politics, or feminism. I want to be across the board, so anyone can see themselves in a secret,” he said. “If it’s strong and offensive, guess what, people keep offensive, racist secrets in their heart. That’s part of the project—exposing that.” He doesn’t intentionally seek out racist or sexist secrets, and doesn’t post anything that’s “hardcore racist,” but he thinks there’s value in representing the less-than-savoury aspects of human nature, because that’s a true representation of who we are as a whole.
That said, there are some kinds of secrets he generally doesn’t post. He often doesn’t upload postcards written from the throes of suicidal ideation. He doesn’t want the website to become a toxic cesspool of hopelessness. He also doesn’t generally post the photos included with secrets when doing so might share with someone intimate knowledge that they didn’t know themselves. One postcard, for example, included a family photograph alongside a secret reading, My brother doesn’t realize his father isn’t the same as our father. All the faces were visible. What if the brother saw it and recognized himself? “I don’t feel like I have ownership of that secret,” Frank said. Instead, he posted the text.
There’s no way to fact-check the secrets; Frank takes those sharing them at their word. In 2013, he posted a secret depicting an image from Google Maps and a red arrow. It read: I said she dumped me, but really, I dumped her (body). After an internet uproar, Reddit users found that the location was in Chicago, someone called the police, and the police found nothing, eventually determining the secret was a hoax. Legally, Frank told me, the postcards are considered hearsay.
The secrets come without context, so Frank put me in touch with a handful of their authors so I could understand what inspired them to send him their postcards. (Occasionally, the authors email him and reveal their identities.) One of them, Casey, was possessed by secrets for all of her childhood. (Casey is a pseudonym; some people in this piece asked that their names be changed to maintain their privacy.) Her father discouraged his kids from making friends and conditioned in them a suspicion of other people. Because he didn’t work, and because her mother, who she suspected had undiagnosed schizophrenia, was shuttered inside all day, Casey was forced to support the family financially. At age fourteen, she was collecting soda bottles for money. The roof was falling in. She was afraid to tell her family she was gay.
When she left home for college in the early 2000s, she was finally able to make friends of her own accord. All of them knew about PostSecret—it was, at the time, in its heyday—and they’d scroll through the entries every Sunday to compare favourites.
Casey liked the honesty of PostSecret, how it gave voice to the unspoken. Her father still had a psychic hold over her life, but she started opening up about her family to her new friends. One of them, Ramón, was gay, too, and not out to his family. They soon became close. He was an aspiring actor, extroverted and funny. It seemed like he knew everyone, and in turn, everyone said he was their best friend. Casey and Ramón were the only people in their friend group who didn’t drink. They’d both grown up with unstable families and were afraid that alcohol would make them lose control.
But when, in junior year, she started experimenting with drinking, he cut off their friendship, accusing her of betraying her values. She was baffled and frustrated; she thought his response was extreme. To do something with her frustration, she submitted a secret decorated with a photo of him in a Halloween costume reading: A real friend would have stayed around and helped me. She heard he’d seen the postcard and was furious, but they never really talked about it, and today, decades later, they’re no longer close. Casey doesn’t keep secrets anymore. She doesn’t tolerate them.
Some secret-keepers described their postcard as liberating. One woman, V., sent in a secret acknowledging that her infertility was a relief because she wouldn’t have to go off her bipolar medications while pregnant. She wanted to become a mother, but she felt that, even if fertile, her body wasn’t capable of carrying a baby, and she didn’t know how to tell her husband. When she wrote her secret, she stared at it on her table, and when it was posted, she stared at it on her screen. She was struck by the fact she could reveal her secret to the public but not to her partner, and decided to tell him how she felt. Last September, they adopted a son.
Others didn’t seem to think much about their secrets after the fact, I learned when I talked to Carl, aged sixty-seven, a former federal law enforcement agent who lives in Washington State. His postcard depicted a hand of eight playing cards. With a Sharpie, he’d written in all caps: GAMBLING DESTROYED MY 4TH AND LAST MARRIAGE.
As we talked, he was to the point, answering questions in a sentence or two and never elaborating. I could picture him: a gruff, single, middle-aged man who left the house every once in a while to get a cup of coffee with a buddy. He must be lonely, though he’d never admit it, and gambling must have distracted him from his loneliness. “I don’t have any secrets,” he said. “And if I did, I wouldn’t be telling you.”
In 2007, he found a postcard among the “boxes and boxes of crap” in his dead mother’s house. At the time, the divorce from his fourth wife was fresh and he was feeling bitter, so he grabbed a Sharpie, scrawled his message, and put it in the mailbox. “That was that. I was blowing off steam,” he said. “It wasn’t some contemplative therapeutic thing.” Then, he told me something that upended my assumptions about him. “It wasn’t my gambling,” he said. “It was her gambling.”
Some postcards are impulsive, I realized. And because the postcard hadn’t specified whose gambling was the issue, I’d filled in the gap. Fascinated by my own mental jump, I asked more questions. How long had they been married? How did he learn about the gambling? Four marriages? What about the other three? To that last question, Carl said, “I don’t think that applies.”
I wanted to tell him: Of course it applies! I felt like his whole life was bound up in that postcard. Something led to the breakup with his first wife, and his second, and his third, which then led him to his fourth, and to their breakup, and to this piece of mail that ended up on Frank’s website. I wanted his autobiography. I wanted to know everything.
Frank told me, “Most of our lives are secret. I think that in the same way that dark matter makes up ninety percent of the universe—this matter that we cannot see or touch or have any evidence of except for its effect on gravity—our lives are like that too. The majority of what we are and who we are is kept private inside. It might express itself in our behaviours, and our fears, and even in human conflict and celebration, but always in this sublimated way.”
. I had the whole week off, and spent a lot of it either enjoying having nothing particular to do or feeling crumby due to the well-known phenomenon whereby as soon as I was on holiday and the show wrapped I came down with the mild lurgy I had been steadfastly refusing to entertain because I had things to do.
At a couple of points, I attempted to do some things I'd been putting off on the excuse that they involved getting things done during office hours, only to find (as I frequently have on previous occasions when I've counted on getting things done when I was on holiday) that the businesses I needed to interact with were also off for the holidays.
. On the weekend, we had a long gaming session where we played Mansions of Madness. The scenario we played was an interesting variation on the usual: ( Read more... )
. At the weekly game meet, we played Cockroach Soup, Flip 7 With a Vengeance, and Epic Spell Wars of the Battle Wizards: Duel at Mt. Skullzfyre. ( Read more... )
. Rehearsals for You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown have begun, and are going well.
. I watched the NASA live stream of the Artemis II launch, and have been following its progress.
. I went to Parkrun this week, despite a bit of rain being forecast; I already had a cold, and I didn't have anything I needed to do later in the day, so I figured it wouldn't hurt. In the event, there was only a brief light sprinkling of rain. I got a couple of nice comments from people who had been to see the play.
. My relationship with hot cross buns since I parted ways with the Holy Mother Church has been erratic. Some years, I make a point of eating one on the wrong day, to prove that the Church can no longer tell me what to do; other years, I make a point of only eating them on Good Friday, on the principle that if a thing's worth doing it's worth doing correctly (because I might be a lapsed Catholic but I'm still a practising pedant). This year, the entire question escaped my mind until it was already Good Friday and all the shops where I knew they were on sale were shut for the public holiday, so I bought some at a discount on Saturday morning and had them for morning tea.
. Until recently, I had managed to avoid getting any spam comments on my AO3 fics, but a couple of the fics I wrote for the most recent Three Sentence Ficathon have apparently stuck out enough to become targets for the kind of spam comment that pretends to be a real review before trying to get you to a secondary location. The one I received this week asserted that "i wasn’t expecting much at first but this actually turned out to be a pretty decent read", which is particularly transparent in the context of a fic that's only 37 words long.
. I was pleased to see the announcement that Farah Mendlesohn has been selected as the GUFF delegate to Swancon 50, then spent several minutes trying to remember where I actually know them from. I eventually managed to narrow it down from "overlapping online fannish space of some kind" to "mostly Diana Wynne Jones fandom, when I was still actively interacting with Diana Wynne Jones fandom". (Skimming the list of GUFF voters, I recognised a name from the old DWJ fan group, followed by another name whose owner was not yet born then, let alone old enough to vote; my, how the time etc.)
#11: A book from a series with the same number of instalments as the previous book
I found myself on ambiguous ground again: although 1066 and All That is usually regarded as a standalone work, its authors followed it up with And Now All This, written in similar style but not precisely a sequel. I opted for a book where the answer to "how many other books in the same series" is also "probably none"; it shares a setting with another of the author's novels, but takes place centuries earlier and has no plot ties. (It was also on the shortlist for the "Keyboard Keys" challenge prompt, but I wasn't in the mood for it at the time.)
When the King Comes Home by Caroline Stevermer. An apprentice artist stumbles onto a plot to bring a legendary king back from the dead as a puppet for an overthrow of the current regime.
#12: A book told from a different kind of POV from the previous book
After that, it seemed obvious that it was time for another re-read of:
A College of Magics by Caroline Stevermer. As the nineteenth century is giving way to the twentieth, the heir to a duchy is sent to a magical boarding school and finds herself entrusted with a task on which the fate of the world depends.
This is undoubtedly my favourite of Stevermer's solo novels (if we allow collaborations, it has competition from Sorcery and Cecelia). One of the key reasons, as I was reminded almost immediately on starting to re-read it, is its sense of humour. It's constantly amusing and full of banter, without undermining the seriousness of the adventure.
#13: A book with a page count within 100 pages of previous book April: Ordinal Numbers
First attempt: The Last Coin by James P Blaylock. A man is trying to track down and acquire the thirty silver coins with which Judas Iscariot was paid, to use for sinister occult purposes. At some point, presumably, one of the other characters is going to figure out what he's up to and stop him.
There can be a tricky balance, starting out a story like this. If you don't explain enough up front, you risk the reader getting lost. If you explain more, you risk the reader deciding that he knows enough about what's going on that he's in no suspense about how it's going to end, and that he doesn't care enough about any of the characters to stick it out for the sake of learning the details. And either way, you risk the reader finding that it's not as funny as the author thought it was.
I came to Dreamwidth right after LJ was sold, but the LJ community had scattered. Very few friends had moved to DW.
I hung around DW for a few weeks and hoped more people I knew would show up, but instead, people moved largely to Twitter or Facebook. I tried Twitter briefly and hated it, so I settled on Facebook to stay in touch with people who were there and not on any other platform (folks like my family members who live in other states). I encouraged people a few times to come to DW, hoping to make a second LJ of it, but after moving once, many were hesitant to move to another new platform. I never understood or liked the feel of Instagram, so I stayed on FB since I didn't know where else to go. When BlueSky came about, I made an account, but it felt like Twitter, and I didn't like the lack of privacy controls, so I've abandoned BlueSky at this point. Threads has a pretty great community and a lot of interesting content, but is owned by META, so I'm hesitant to invest myself there.
I miss the thoughtful, long-form writing like we had in LJ years ago. I miss the people and the caring comments instead of just a thumbs-up button. LJ was such a great community...until it suddenly wasn't. But I'm giving DW another chance. Who's here?
When I went to see Project Hail Mary at OMSI, I knew I'd be passing some cool stuff I'd love to shoot, but wasn't going to bring a camera back to a movie theater... though I think I could have gotten away with it. I tried to take some pics, but most are not worth posting.
This one is okay:
See that sort of sheen/reflection off of the paint? It's not very visible in person, but in most of my shots it obscures the art. I can't control for it well via a phone.
On the way to the show, I stopped at Living Haus Brewing because I hadn't tried it yet. I had a half pour of a cream ale. It was okay. I'll need to try something else by them. But, I did stop and write for a bit in a brewery in a converted warehouse with an analog DJ deck:
Racking up the Portlandy points. I was working on a project that hoooopefully I'll have done soon.
Fast forward to today...
Anyway, for today the plan was to go write at Queer Plants. But on the way I saw something happening at Mike Bennett's studio so I hopped off, checked out what turned out to be a community tag sale and then walked to Queer Plants... but I wandered a bit and then wound up at the corner of Alameda and Alameda. Took 3 hours to get there. I'd been tempted to bring my real camera in case I saw anything to help get my photo posting going again, but I did not... and then I wound up walking for hours.
Glimpse of what Mike Bennett is currently working on:
Secrets Left to Post: 02 pages, 42 secrets from Secret Submission Post #1004. Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ]. Current Secret Submissions Post:here. Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.
AU where Claudia, after being caught with the police in the house, and the body in her wardrobe, is distracted by Louis for long enough for Lestat to go out and find a young, desperate boy to be the equal companion she longed for. A twin brother of the blood, and one that takes after him since Claudia takes so much after Louis.
A mail-order bride husband.
Claudia, sensing a new bar on her cage, can't help but be resentful of him as well. This boy who is now expected to keep her happy. Like gifting a puppy to a lonely girl for Christmas so she won't tear the curtains down anymore. This boy who is expected to share her coffin until they find time and a more delicate approach to procuring one. She doesn't want him here, and he knows it, but he was hungry before and he's hungry now and Claudia seems to know how to eat, right?
A young boy Lestat grows even more jealous of as time passes, and he worries he'll be replaced in Louis's heart, because Louis dotes on the boy just as much as he doted upon the young Claudia. And they get along so well, too, both more mild-mannered and more interested in human business than Lestat thinks is wise. This boy helps Louis decorate for Christmas, the boy finds music to be exhausting and is much more interested in strolling the town and plucking stories from people's minds.
The boy is not a fix to the family, he just adds more chaos to them. They are the kind of siblings who hate each other, but can't seem to be apart from each other for more than a night. The kind of siblings that throw knives at each other, lock each other in closets, and dig ditches for bodies then push each other in, and fight wickedly until they have a united target.
The kind of siblings who learn how to speak and turn in unison because they like the smell of fear in the air when the move in sync. The boy that Claudia is irritated that she falls for, but eventually glad because when she tries to leave for college (delayed by the introduction of the boy), he chases after her and keeps her company.
AU where Daniel is chosen to be Claudia's young husband when he was selling newspapers on a street corner and so hungry he would have done anything for a bit of food.
XANDER: "I think we did great. We knocked em dead. Which they already were."
WILLOW: "We knocked 'em deader!"
ANYA: "They weren't very well organized. If they had all rushed at Buffy they could have killed her right away."
BUFFY: "Thanks Anya. That won't keep me awake all night."
JONATHAN: "Vampires only form nests to make hunting easier. They're not big on the cooperation. They mostly like to hang out all creepy and alone in the shadows."
This is your check-in post for today. The poll will be open from midnight Universal or Zulu Time (8pm Eastern Time) on Saturday to midnight on Sunday (8pm Eastern Time).
Optional: If you would like your secret's fandom to be noted in the main post along with the secret itself, please put it in the comment along with your secret. If your secret makes the fandom obvious, there's no need to do this. If your fandom is obscure, you should probably tell me what it is.
Optional #2: If you would like WARNINGS (such as spoilers or common triggers -- list of some common ones here) to be noted in the main post before the secret itself, please put it in the comment along with your secret.
Optional #3: If you would like a transcript to be posted along with your secret, put it along with the link in the comment!
Rodrigo Ghedin translates “Microsoft AI reshuffle: Mustafa Suleyman goes AI doomsday crank” into Portuguese for Manual do Usuário. “Você pode achar que é disso [controle] que sempre se tratou o avanço da IA no Vale do Silício. Os receios de uma super-IA ou de uma revolta dos robôs sempre foram receios dos pobres se rebelando contra os ricos. Eles não têm medo dos robôs — têm medo de você.” [Manual do Usuário]
4-4-26 Drawing myself and Rainy sitting on the porch. I'm drawing, Rainy's sitting. Then I drew a little bird on my shoulder. So then I'm imagining what life would be like with a bird sitting on your shoulder a lot of the time. Thinking I could do it.
But first I think I would need to prove to myself that I could put in the effort to keep things clean (er). I won't live in a house with a bunch of bird poops all over the place. I do pretty good about cleaning up things like animal poop and hair. It's DUSTING that I have a problem with. I know from raising baby chicks in the bathroom how dirty and dusty birdies can be. I'm still going to keep fantasizing. It will be many months before I could get one anyway, if I do decide to.
Walking out to get the mail I need to cross the rows of daffodils that Rossy and I planted. They are the healthiest and strongest that they've ever been. Usually in past years when we have a heavy rain in makes a number of them fall on their faces and they never recover. This year they all stood up tall in the big rains we recently had.
***** I took a break from writing this to make squash soup for dinner. Dave had done the prep work on the squash so it was easy to make the soup. It was good. I used pumpkin pie seasoning in it this time. I ate too much. I still have lots to do to get ready for the easter dinner people who're coming tomorrow. I should get to work. Sweep, vacuum, clean tables, make broccoli salad, deviled eggs, mashed potatoes, mushroom gravy, riblets for the vegans and ham loaf for the meat eaters. But we aren't eating till after 4:30 so I'll have time tomorrow too.
4. Are there opportunities to go walking where you live? Do you take advantage of that?
Yes, we have a wonderful park near our house that has a 1-4 mile walk. You choose the one you want to go on. We do walk when I'm up to it. I prefer to swim. It's easier on my lungs, believe it or not.
1. What is your idea of a perfect Saturday? Describe it in detail starting with waking up. My idea of a perfect Saturday is waking up. 😂😂 Well, it's true. Hubby and I always do the laundry, sheets and blankets. Then later in the day we go for a long drive. Once we come home I make a nice dinner. After we eat we watch a new movie or start a new series. I love Saturdays. We always have a good time. Tomorrow our great-grandaughter, Korbyn, is coming over for two hours. She's so damn cute. We love when she comes.
1. Life is short. Smile while you still have teeth.” – Mallory Hopkins 2. “The best way to appreciate your job is to imagine yourself without one.” – Oscar Wilde 3. “Do not take life too seriously. You will never get out of it alive.” – Elbert Hubbard 4. “Age is of no importance unless you’re a cheese.” – Billie Burke 5. “Life is like a sewer… what you get out of it depends on what you put into it.” – Tom Lehrer
If you can still remember, what are your funniest childhood memories?
Playing baseball every Saturday and Sunday with our whole family, and realizing we didn't have a single person on our teams who was good. My folks would laugh so hard. So did we. It was a fun memory.
1. I saw a bank that said, “24-hour banking” but I don’t have that much time. 2. I had to stop driving my car for a while, because the tires got dizzy. 3. I invented the cordless extension cord. 4. Why do irons have a setting for permanent press? 5. I look like a casual laid-back guy, but it’s like a circus in my head.
Lonely Prompts Sunday, Week 14 [DW Edition]
Apr. 5th, 2026 12:00 pm↑↑↑ Available dates:
April 7 & 9
April 14 & 16
April 21 & 23
Hi! ^.^ It's time for this week's Lonely Prompts adoption day. If this is your first time at
How to look for prompts:
We have plenty of prompts that might just nibble away at your brain today. You can browse through the comm's calendar archive (here on LJ or here on DW) for themed and Free For All posts, or perhaps check out Sunday posts for Lonely Prompt requests. (Or, you can be like me, and try to save interesting prompts as you see 'em... and then end up with multiple text doc files full of [themes + links + prompts] that you can easily look through and search for keywords.) Multiple fills for one prompt are welcome, by the way! Oh, and you are very likely to find some awesome fills to read as well, and wouldn't it be nice to leave a comment on those lovely little writing distractions? ~_^
Whichever you decide to do, prompt or fill (or both), please remember:
1. You can only request five prompts to be filled.
2. You can request no more than three prompts from a particular fandom.
3. You can, however, fill as many prompts in as many fandoms as you'd like!
4. In the subject line, be sure to say whether it is a request or a fill!
5. You must link back to wherever the prompt is in the community archive (whether filling or requesting), and, if you're filling the prompt, please post the fill as a reply to the original prompt.
6. If you are filling an "any/any" prompt, please let us know what fandom you've written it for (or if it's original!).
8. If there are possible triggers in your story, please warn for them in the subject line!
7. If you've filled any lonely prompts in the past week, this is the place to share them!
9. Finally, please remember to add your prompt fills to our AO3 collection: Bite Sized Bits of Fic from 2026 collection. See further notes on this option here.
How to link:
[a href="http://comment-fic.livejournal.com/449155.html?thread=70682755#t70682755">MCU, Tony Stark/Pepper Potts, She's wearing daisy dukes and one of his button-down shirts.[/a]
(change the brackets to "<" and ">" respectively)
or:
http://comment-fic.livejournal.com/139897.html?thread=30155641#t30155641
Burn Notice, Sam/Michael/Fi, "It's always been you. And it's always gonna be you."
We are on AO3! If you fill a prompt and post it to AO3, please add it to the Bite Sized Bits of Fic from 2026 collection.
If you are viewing this post on our Dreamwidth site: please know that fills posted here will not show up as comments on our LiveJournal site, but you are still more than welcome to participate. =)
If you have a Dreamwidth account and would feel more comfortable participating there, please feel free to do so… and spread the word!
A friendly reminder about our posting schedule: Themed posts for new prompts go up on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Saturdays are a Free for All day for new prompts of any flavor. Sundays are for showing Lonely Prompts some love, whether by requesting for someone to adopt them or by sharing any fills that you've recently completed.