Blog, Prompts and Challenges

Fairly February Feelings Daily Social Media Prompts

Fairly February Feelings Daily Social Media Prompts

February social media prompts to get you going

I love making content calendars. Is that weird? I dunno. Makes me happy though. It seems I’ve developed a pattern of creating them every other month. I made this December calendar and a fall calendar. Or maybe it’s just the fun months? I like the rhythm of every other month. January is a weird month for me. I typically spend it in a cozy bubble of warm blankets, with planners and pens. Eventually I emerge from my planner-frenzied winter hibernation with tons of ideas and optimism.

I realized this is my pattern when I thought, hmmm… I’m having fairly February feelings. Loved the alliteration. Ran to my laptop and created these February social media prompts based on the things I want to talk about in February.

Will I do all the prompts? I’d love to say, “Yes, of course!” because they’re topics I’m interested in. I have lots of ideas for talking about my Unity Falls series. But if I do a couple a week, I’ll be very satisfied. I hope these prompts give you some inspiration or start some discussion with other friends.

How to use this calendar:

Here’s everything in one place so you can save it, share it, or use it however you like.

While this is presented as a daily calendar, you don’t need to follow the prompts in order. You don’t even need to do them all.

The important thing is that they inspire you — without pressure. Life is hard enough, so I hope this gives you something fun to look forward to or talk about. A text only list is below the graphic in case that’s more useful. Feel free to even just be inspired by them and run with your own take. No rules! Just fun.

Pink February social media prompt calendar titled “Fairly February Feelings,” featuring daily romance-themed prompts about meet-cutes, misunderstandings, Valentine’s Day, chocolate, romantic tropes, and contemporary romance, with heart illustrations and a soft pink color palette.

You can save the image or scroll for the text-only list below.

Fairly February Feelings text only social media prompts list

  1. Meet-cute or meet-cringe?
    (your favorite fictional one… or real if you dare to share)
  2. The lingering look that meant nothing. Except it didn’t.
  3. A perfectly reasonable amount of chocolate
    (define “reasonable.”)
  4. The lingering look that really did mean nothing
    (your favorite or funniest mistaken-interest moment)
  5. Valentine’s-themed desserts — yes or overrated?
  6. The “I’m never doing that again” moment
  7. Misunderstanding that could’ve been solved with one sentence
  8. Breakup bingo ✅
    how many squares do you fill?
  9. The friend who knew before you did
  10. Candles: mood-setting or fire hazard?
  11. The worst date that became a funny story (eventually)
  12. Chocolate factoids to justify emotional decisions
  13. Romantic mood killer?
    (what’s a “romantic gesture” that totally spoils it?)
  14. Valentine’s or Galentine’s? 💌
  15. Chocolate as a coping strategy
    rating scale: effective → life-altering
  16. The one trope you’ll defend forever
    (yes… even that one you don’t admit to.)
  17. Accidentally romantic moments
  18. Everything started off well… until it didn’t. Flames that dwindled or were doused
  19. When the town has opinions about your love life
  20. Fake relationships… Hypothetically. What are your conditions.
  21. Romantic advice you would never actually take
  22. Contemporary romance: Team Comedy or Team Drama
  23. Who’s the romantic drama? Your hot take on your favorite ship.
  24. Love languages, but incorrectly applied
  25. Romantic gesture/moment that makes you melt
  26. Accidentally caught feelings? Who’s your go-to example?
  27. Your favourite couple. Why you like them (real or fictional)
  28. February wrap-up:
    What did we learn? (wrong answers only

By Cleo Croft

Cleo Croft writes contemporary romance stories with optimism and an appreciation of the ridiculous nature of life’s awkward moments. Her experiences travelling and living abroad brought home the importance of connecting with people and developing bonds. She writes stories about people looking for love and creating community and families of all types.

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