Posted in The AI Drabble Challenge

The AI Drabble Challenge – Week #8: An Alphabet Sevenling

Welcome back to the AI Drabble Challenge, a weekly experiment in human and AI creativity. Each Wednesday, I will set a prompt to inspire a Drabble, a story told in exactly 100 words.

You can use any AI model you like (ChatGPT, Claude, Grok, Gemini, or others), or several at once. How you collaborate is up to you. Maybe the AI drafts the first version, or writes the whole thing, maybe you co-write, or maybe you use it to spark ideas. What matters is the process, and sharing it.

This Week’s Prompt

This week I thought I would try something different. I’m always intrigued as to how AI copes when asked unusual questions (have a read of The Prompt Experiment to see an example of this).

So, today’s prompt is to write a Drabble where every sentence must start with the next letter of the alphabet – A → B → C → D → etc. To add to the fun, ask AI to write it as a Sevenling poem. A Sevenling is a seven-line poem built around a structure of three lines, three lines, and finish with one line. The example below will make this much clearer.

This is stretching AI to play with more than one instruction, both being somewhat unrelated!


Example Sevenling Drabble – ‘The City That Listens’

I used ChatGPT 5.1 and the prompt was – “Write a sinister, dystopian, alphabet sevenling of 100 words. Every sentence must start with the next letter of the alphabet”

All around us in the ruined district, alarms wailed softly as automated drones circled overhead.
Beneath the fractured sky, buildings leaned inward as though eavesdropping on our trembling breaths.
Concrete shadows drifted across the pavements, carrying rumours of vanished citizens and forbidden machinery.

Deep within the echoing tunnels, distant voices repeated our names long before we arrived.
Evening descended abruptly, erasing colours and leaving only silhouettes shaped like unfinished memories.
Further ahead, a flicker of movement suggested the city itself was learning to listen.

Gathering courage, we stepped forward together, unaware the ground had already chosen which one to keep.


How to Take Part

  1. Write your 100-word Drabble with help from an AI tool (or two).
  2. Post your story in the comments, or publish it on your own website and include a pingback to this post.
  3. If you can, share which AI model(s) you used and the prompt that started your process, we can all learn from each other.

Community & Highlights

Each week, I’ll read through the entries, share a few favourites, and highlight one that particularly stood out, for originality, style, or the inventive way it used AI.

This isn’t about competition; it’s about curiosity, experimentation, and celebrating how humans and machines can create together.

A Closing Thought

AI gives us the tools, but we give it meaning. Let’s see what stories emerge this week, 100 words at a time.


Now it’s over to you, can you craft your own 100-word Drabble inspired by this week’s prompt.

Post your story in the comments below or link to your own blog, I love seeing the imaginative twists readers come up with. So don’t be shy, join in and show us what your AI + Your Imagination can do!

New to the challenge? Visit The AI Drabbles Challenge Page for all the details and past prompts.


Posted in AI and Creativity

Give This AI Image a Caption #1 – The Monday Morning Meeting Nobody Asked For

I was experimenting with Midjourney again this week, the digital equivalent of rummaging in a curiosity shop, when it produced an image that made me stop, blink, and mutter “What on earth…?” into the quiet of the room.

Not because it was beautiful. Not because it was meaningful. But because it looked uncannily like the sort of gathering you’d stumble into if you took a wrong turn inside a Tim Burton film.

I won’t explain it. That would ruin the fun. Instead, I’ll let you take it in and decide for yourself what kind of meeting these peculiar beings are having… and why the one in the middle looks like they’d very much like to leave.

A surreal, Tim Burton-style illustration showing a nervous stick-figure person surrounded by four bizarre, wide-eyed monsters: a black spiky one, a red blobby one, and two blue creatures — one offering a steaming cup. All appear to be staring at the central figure.

I spent a good minute trying to work out whether these creatures were:

  • interviewing the poor soul in the middle,
  • arguing about who has to drink the coffee,
  • or simply waiting for someone to explain why they were all summoned here at 9am.

Whatever’s going on, one thing is certain: this image desperately needs a caption. And that’s where you come in.

Your Turn, Caption This Image

Give me your best line in the comments.

It can be:

  • silly
  • serious
  • poetic
  • ominous
  • cheerfully unhinged
  • or something so perfect I’ll wish I’d thought of it myself

Next week, I’ll share my favourite captions, and I might even transform one or two into tiny stories. Consider it our weekly creative mischief session between humans and machines.

A Closing Thought

The thing I love most about AI images is that they don’t care about logic. They’ll happily hand you a scene that feels like a cross between a nightmare, a cartoon, and a philosophical debate about hot beverages. And somehow, in the middle of all that strangeness, your imagination wakes up.

So… what do you think is really happening here?



Posted in AI and Creativity

Is Everything Made by AI Really Just “Slop”?

I keep hearing the phrase “AI slop” tossed around with the sort of relish usually reserved for complaining about school dinners or the state of modern television. It’s become one of those instant dismissals, a way to wrinkle one’s nose and wave away anything that happens to have an algorithm involved.

But is it really fair? Is everything touched by AI automatically destined for the creative compost heap? Personally, I don’t buy it, and the more I talk to people about it, the more it feels like the term tells us far more about the speaker than the work itself.

Continue reading “Is Everything Made by AI Really Just “Slop”?”
Posted in The AI Drabble Challenge

The AI Drabble Challenge – Week #7: Questions, Nothing But Questions

Welcome back to the AI Drabble Challenge, a weekly experiment in human and AI creativity. Each Wednesday, I will set a prompt to inspire a Drabble, a story told in exactly 100 words.

You can use any AI model you like (ChatGPT, Claude, Grok, Gemini, or others), or several at once. How you collaborate is up to you. Maybe the AI drafts the first version, or writes the whole thing, maybe you co-write, or maybe you use it to spark ideas. What matters is the process, and sharing it.

Continue reading “The AI Drabble Challenge – Week #7: Questions, Nothing But Questions”
Posted in AI and Creativity

When Light and Shadow Stop Playing Nicely: My Latest Prompt Experiment

One of the things I love about creating these weekly stories is that the prompts often take me somewhere I never planned to go. This week’s experiment was all about pushing myself into stranger, more surreal territory. I wanted to nudge the story away from neat structure and towards something that felt slightly off-balance, as if the world itself had started arguing.

The starting point was simple enough: What happens if light and shadow stop cooperating? It sounds like the beginning of a physics lesson. Instead, it turned into a domestic haunting with a mischievous streak.

The seed of the idea came from watching how shadows behave in real life. They stretch, shrink, wander off when the sun decides to take a different route. But they never rebel. They never get ideas above their station. So I wondered: What if they did? What if shadows sulked like teenagers and light became a nervous wreck hiding behind the furniture? Once I’d seen that image, the rest of the story began to form.

I also wanted to explore that moment when a prompt stops being a prompt and becomes a proper narrative engine. “The Argument Between Light and Shadow” isn’t just a title or a funny thought experiment, it forces the story to misbehave. You can’t take that prompt and write something tidy. It demands a little absurdity. A little dread. A little “oh dear, this is going to go wrong, isn’t it?”

Prompts like this are a reminder of why I love these experiments. They’re odd. They’re playful. They keep me curious. And sometimes, if I’m lucky, they give me a story that glows a little differently… even if the light is hiding behind the sofa.

Here is the story…


The Argument Between Light and Shadow

The trouble began on a Tuesday, though it had probably been brewing for ages. I noticed it while making tea. The kitchen light flicked on, but instead of filling the room, it cowered behind the cupboard, shivering like a nervous cat. The shadows, freed from their usual discipline, sprawled wherever they pleased, a long, sulky smear under the toaster, a rude blob on the ceiling, a jagged sliver draped dramatically over the fridge.

I cleared my throat. “Everything all right in here?”

The shadows rustled irritably, as though I’d interrupted a meeting I had no right to attend. The light just quivered, refusing to emerge. By lunchtime the whole house felt… argumentative. The hallway light refused to illuminate the hall, preferring to shine sulkily at the skirting board. The shadows, delighted by the chaos, slipped under doors, curled around table legs, and stretched into places they’d never been invited. They sulked in clusters, muttering in corners like teenagers staging a protest.

I tried switching on a lamp in the living room. It blazed for one glorious second, then ducked sharply behind the sofa, bathing only the underside of a cushion in a triumphant glow.

“For goodness’ sake,” I snapped, “this isn’t sustainable.”

A chorus of shadows hissed back. The worst moment came around three o’clock when I attempted to read. Every time my eyes settled on a sentence, a shadow darted across the page, obscuring the words. When I moved the book, the light flickered away in a huff, as though offended by my neediness. I was trapped between a jealous light and sulking darkness, a referee in a cosmic divorce.

By four, I’d had enough. I marched into the centre of the lounge, hands on hips. “Listen,” I said, addressing the room like a headteacher breaking up a playground fight, “you two need each other. Light, you can’t exist without casting shadows. Shadows, you’re only interesting because of the light. So whatever this argument is, sort it.”

Silence. Then a single shaft of light crept timidly across the carpet, meeting a shy ripple of shadow halfway. They swirled, hesitating. Negotiating. For a moment I felt hopeful.

Then my shadow tore itself free from the wall, not a ripple this time, but a clean, deliberate separation. It formed into a full, upright figure, my shape in pure black. It tilted its head, as if deciding whether it liked what it saw. Before I could scream, it stepped forward and slid neatly into my body’s place, leaving me weightless and fading.