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105 Writing Prompts for Romance Authors Writing Disabled Characters: The Scene Starter Prompts, #1
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105 Writing Prompts for Romance Authors Writing Disabled Characters: The Scene Starter Prompts, #1 in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $5.99

Coles
105 Writing Prompts for Romance Authors Writing Disabled Characters: The Scene Starter Prompts, #1 in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $5.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
You know the scene you have been avoiding.
The one where your disabled character has to ask for help for the first time. The one where disclosure happens and you do not know what the other person says next. The one where intimacy requires navigation and you have been stuck on how to write the navigation without making it clinical, or dramatic, or a problem to solve.
This is the prompt pack for that scene.
The Accessible Romance Pack contains 105 carefully constructed writing prompts across 14 disability categories, designed specifically for romance authors who want to write disabled characters with the specificity, interiority, and emotional truth that representation demands — and that readers can feel.
What's inside:
Every prompt in this pack is built on a foundational principle: disability is not a plot device. It is a daily navigation. It has texture. It has history. It shapes how a character moves through the world and through a relationship — not as an obstacle to love, but as part of the specific, irreplaceable person being loved.
The 14 categories covered are:
Wheelchair Users and Mobility Disability (8 prompts) — The wheelchair is a tool, not a tragedy, and the character is the expert
Chronic Pain (8 prompts) — Pain is specific, not dramatic, and the character has been managing it longer than you have known them
Deaf and Hard of Hearing (7 prompts) — Language is not only spoken, and connection does not require sound
Blind and Low Vision (7 prompts) — The other senses are not compensation, they are the whole landscape
Anxiety and Depression (8 prompts) — Mental health is not a plot twist, it is a daily navigation with its own texture and its own light
PTSD and Trauma (7 prompts) — Trust is not given, it is built specifically, and this character knows how to build it
Autism and Autistic Characters (8 prompts) — Direct communication is not a flaw, and deep focus is not a problem to be managed
ADHD (7 prompts) — The attention is not absent, it is elsewhere, and when it arrives it arrives completely
Limb Differences (7 prompts) — The body the character has is the body they know best, and that knowledge is its own kind of confidence
Chronic Fatigue and Invisible Illness (7 prompts) — The energy budget is real and the person managing it has been doing so longer than the relationship
Sensory Processing and Communication Differences (7 prompts) — The environment is infrastructure and building it together is one of the most intimate acts available
Disclosure (8 prompts) — The decision to tell someone is one of the most intimate decisions available and it deserves its own scene
Intimacy and Adaptation (8 prompts) — Intimacy for disabled characters is not a workaround, it is a complete and specific and often extraordinary thing
Universal Disability Romance (8 prompts) — For any disability, any draft, any scene where the character deserves to be wanted exactly as they are
You know the scene you have been avoiding.
The one where your disabled character has to ask for help for the first time. The one where disclosure happens and you do not know what the other person says next. The one where intimacy requires navigation and you have been stuck on how to write the navigation without making it clinical, or dramatic, or a problem to solve.
This is the prompt pack for that scene.
The Accessible Romance Pack contains 105 carefully constructed writing prompts across 14 disability categories, designed specifically for romance authors who want to write disabled characters with the specificity, interiority, and emotional truth that representation demands — and that readers can feel.
What's inside:
Every prompt in this pack is built on a foundational principle: disability is not a plot device. It is a daily navigation. It has texture. It has history. It shapes how a character moves through the world and through a relationship — not as an obstacle to love, but as part of the specific, irreplaceable person being loved.
The 14 categories covered are:
Wheelchair Users and Mobility Disability (8 prompts) — The wheelchair is a tool, not a tragedy, and the character is the expert
Chronic Pain (8 prompts) — Pain is specific, not dramatic, and the character has been managing it longer than you have known them
Deaf and Hard of Hearing (7 prompts) — Language is not only spoken, and connection does not require sound
Blind and Low Vision (7 prompts) — The other senses are not compensation, they are the whole landscape
Anxiety and Depression (8 prompts) — Mental health is not a plot twist, it is a daily navigation with its own texture and its own light
PTSD and Trauma (7 prompts) — Trust is not given, it is built specifically, and this character knows how to build it
Autism and Autistic Characters (8 prompts) — Direct communication is not a flaw, and deep focus is not a problem to be managed
ADHD (7 prompts) — The attention is not absent, it is elsewhere, and when it arrives it arrives completely
Limb Differences (7 prompts) — The body the character has is the body they know best, and that knowledge is its own kind of confidence
Chronic Fatigue and Invisible Illness (7 prompts) — The energy budget is real and the person managing it has been doing so longer than the relationship
Sensory Processing and Communication Differences (7 prompts) — The environment is infrastructure and building it together is one of the most intimate acts available
Disclosure (8 prompts) — The decision to tell someone is one of the most intimate decisions available and it deserves its own scene
Intimacy and Adaptation (8 prompts) — Intimacy for disabled characters is not a workaround, it is a complete and specific and often extraordinary thing
Universal Disability Romance (8 prompts) — For any disability, any draft, any scene where the character deserves to be wanted exactly as they are


















