Breaking

Friday, March 6, 2026

how to make puppys video with free ai tools

 


Master Prompt for story:

Prompt:

 Create 5 original, emotional short stories in English about a poor puppy character.


The poor puppy always wears torn clothes with holes, looks weak, but has a kind heart and struggles against hardships.

All stories must be set in India’s environment (villages, markets, buses, fields, streets, Indian houses, etc.).

All human characters (farmers, workers, bus conductors, shopkeepers, etc.) and locations must match the Indian atmosphere and culture.

Each story should be of similar length and detail as the examples below.

The stories must be heart-touching and emotional, showing the poor puppy’s suffering, his hard work, and finally his small success or dignity.

Keep the narration simple, clear, and storytelling style, just like a children’s storybook mixed with an emotional moral tone.

Examples (Follow this exact style, tone, and length):


Example Story 1


A poor puppy, dressed in torn clothes full of holes, sat in his little wooden house on the side of the road. Suddenly, some men with a crane arrived and began tearing down his home. The puppy begged them not to destroy it, but instead, they hit him and broke his house completely.


When the house collapsed, two rich puppies stood nearby and laughed loudly at his misery. The poor puppy cried bitterly, but soon he gathered courage and went to a farmer, asking for a job. The kind farmer agreed and hired him.


The poor puppy went to the market, bought seeds, placed them in a bucket, and sowed them in the ground. Soon, rain poured down. Sitting in the rain, covering his head with his little paws, the puppy watched his crops grow. Later, he sprayed his fields to protect them.


The farmer paid him his wages, and the poor puppy was overjoyed. He rushed to the market, and with his hard-earned money, he bought a strong plastic house. Sitting proudly inside his new home, the poor puppy felt truly happy for the first time.


Example Story 2


A poor puppy, wearing tattered clothes with holes, walked down the road with a stick on his shoulder. On both sides of the stick, small bundles of his belongings hung.


As he walked, a bus stopped in front of him. The poor puppy tried to climb aboard, but the conductor shoved him hard and threw him out. His belongings scattered across the road, and the poor puppy cried loudly in pain and humiliation.


Determined not to give up, he later found work in the fields, riding on a tractor and sowing rice crops. Rain poured heavily, and the poor puppy covered his head with a sack as he sat in the field, waiting for the rain to pass while guarding the crops.


In time, his employer paid him his wages. The puppy was filled with joy. He hurried to the market and bought six new sets of clothes.


The next time he boarded the bus, the same conductor, who had once insulted him, now welcomed him with respect and offered him a proper seat.


Now, using these two examples as the exact style guide, generate 5 completely new stories of the same type.







Master Prompt with Motion

Prompt:

 I will provide you with a short story.

 Your task is to break down the story line by line (or sentence by sentence) and generate a detailed cinematic image prompt AND a motion prompt for each scene to be used in making a short video.


For each line of the story:


Identify the scene clearly.

Write a detailed cinematic image prompt in English that includes:

The poor puppy (torn dirty clothes, holes, weak but emotional).

The Indian environment (streets, farms, buses, huts, markets, etc. depending on the story).

The characters’ emotions (crying, happy, begging, working, smiling).

Background details (weather, crops, broken house, bus interior, village markets, etc.).

Camera angle, realism, lighting (example: cinematic wide shot, close-up, rainy atmosphere, soft natural light).

Immediately after the image prompt, also write a Motion Prompt that describes the small movements/actions in the scene, for example: wind blowing, puppy moving, tears falling, bus starting, people laughing, rain falling, crops swaying.

Keep both prompts detailed, consistent, and cinematic.

Output Format Example:


If the story line is: “A poor puppy sat outside his broken wooden house, crying.”


👉 The result should be:


Scene 1 Image Prompt:

 “Photorealistic 3D cinematic close-up of a poor puppy with torn dirty clothes full of holes, sitting outside a broken wooden hut on the side of an Indian village road, tears in his eyes, sad expression, cloudy sky, emotional atmosphere, natural lighting, highly detailed textures.”


Scene 1 Motion Prompt:

 “Tears slowly roll down the puppy’s cheeks, his body trembles in sadness, the leaves around him move gently with the wind, creating a sorrowful atmosphere.”


Insert Story Here:


[ Paste your selected story here ]



Now generate for every line of the story:


Number each scene (Scene 1, Scene 2, Scene 3…).

Provide both:


Image Prompt

Motion Prompt

Ensure the poor puppy’s appearance stays consistent in all scenes, and the Indian environment is realistic and detailed


*"What if people laugh at me?"*


*"What if I'm not good enough?"*


One thought led to another. And another. And another.


Before he knew it, hours had passed. The day was gone. And he had done nothing.


His boss noticed. His girlfriend noticed. His parents noticed.


But Arjun? He didn't notice. He was too busy... thinking.


---


## ⚔️ **[STRUGGLE & CONFLICT – 1:00 to 2:15]**


Weeks turned into months.


He missed deadlines. He skipped meetings. He avoided phone calls.


His girlfriend left him. She said, "I can't be with someone who's not even present."


His boss fired him. He said, "You have talent, Arjun. But talent means nothing without action."


His parents stopped asking questions. They just looked at him with sad eyes.


And still, Arjun sat in his room. Thinking. Worrying. Overthinking.


He wasn't lazy. He wanted to move. He wanted to change.


But his mind... his mind had become a prison.


Every time he tried to step forward, a thousand thoughts pulled him back.


*"You're too late."*


*"You've already failed."*


*"Everyone else is ahead of you."*


One night, alone in his empty apartment, Arjun looked at himself in the mirror.


And for the first time, he asked a different question.


*"Who is controlling me?"*


---


## 🔑 **[SYMBOLIC TURNING POINT – 2:15 to 3:15]**


The next morning, something strange happened.


Arjun went for a walk. No plan. No purpose. Just... walking.


He passed by a park. And there, sitting on a bench, was an old man.


The old man was feeding birds. Calm. Quiet. Focused.


Arjun sat down next to him.


After a few minutes, the old man spoke.


"You look like someone fighting a war."


Arjun nodded. "I am. But I keep losing."


The old man smiled. "That's because you're fighting the wrong enemy."


Arjun frowned. "What do you mean?"


The old man pointed to the birds.


"See them? They don't think about flying. They just fly. They don't worry about falling. They just trust their wings."


He turned to Arjun.


"Your mind is not your enemy. Your thoughts are not your enemy. The enemy is believing every thought that comes."


Arjun stared at him.


"You think you need to control your thoughts," the old man continued. "But you don't. You just need to stop obeying them."


The old man stood up and walked away.


Arjun sat there. Silent. Still.


For the first time in months, his mind felt... quiet.


---


## 💡 **[REALIZATION & IDENTITY SHIFT – 3:15 to 4:30]**


That day changed everything.


Arjun realized something powerful.


He had been giving his thoughts too much power.


Every fear. Every doubt. Every "what if."


He had been treating them like facts. Like truth.


But they were just... thoughts.


Thoughts come. Thoughts go.


The question is: *Do you follow them?*


Arjun started small.


One morning, his mind said, *"Don't get up. You'll fail anyway."*


But this time, Arjun didn't listen. He got up.


Another day, his mind said, *"Don't apply for that job. You're not ready."*


But this time, Arjun didn't obey. He applied.


His mind screamed. It resisted. It threw fear at him like stones.


But Arjun kept moving.


Not because the thoughts stopped. They didn't.


But because he stopped giving them control.


Weeks passed. Then months.


He got a new job. He started building again. He reconnected with people.


His life didn't become perfect. But it became *his* again.


Because he learned the truth:


**You don't control your thoughts. But you control your actions.**


---


## 🧠 **[CORE LIFE LESSON – 4:30 to 5:15]**


Here's what most people don't understand.


Your mind will always create thoughts. That's its job.


Fear. Doubt. Worry. Overthinking.


It's normal. It's human.


But just because a thought appears... doesn't mean you have to believe it.


Just because your mind says "stop"... doesn't mean you have to stop.


The strongest people are not the ones with quiet minds.


They're the ones who act *despite* the noise.


Discipline is not about feeling motivated.


It's about moving forward when every part of you wants to quit.


Arjun lost everything because he gave his thoughts too much power.


But he rebuilt everything the moment he took that power back.


---


## 🎯 **[STRONG EMOTIONAL ENDING + CTA – 5:15 to 5:45]**


So ask yourself this.


Right now. Today.


Are you controlling your life? Or are your thoughts controlling you?


Because the difference between success and failure, between growth and stagnation, between peace and chaos...


...is not what you think.


It's what you *do* with what you think.


Your mind will test you. Every single day.


But you don't have to pass the test by winning the argument.


You pass the test by taking the step anyway.


Arjun learned this the hard way.


Don't make the same mistake.


---


**If this story touched you, hit the like button, share it with someone who needs to hear this, and subscribe for more stories that change the way you see yourself.**


**Because the battle isn't out there. It's in here. And you *can* win it.**


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