Tag Archives: Creativity

Writing Update and why Window key + H is amazing – 11/05/2025

You only need to break two metacarpals to get wildly sidetracked from writing and other creative pursuits which is why I haven’t updated the website in a while. That and I am in the process of buying a house, which is going well, but all in all it has taken away time and energy. But mostly its the hand.

And while in the grand scheme of things its not a major injury, it has been debilitating. The short version of what happened; it turns out security doors are harder that my bones. Especially if one slams on your hand when you aren’t looking. I was not amused.

Please enjoy this x-ray and the associated distress.

What has this experience taught me?

Life will happen, accidents will happen, and you will have to adapt.

For work and for my personal writing I had to change, amend, or outright write off deadlines and goals that were unattainable. This sucked the motivation right out. I had finally established a strong writing routine, consistently producing around 500+ words daily, and over night it was gone. So I adapted and found new tools to help me.

It is inevitable, that something like it will happen to you, so take it as an opportunity to reorient yourself and try different ways of doing things. For me, I settled into a routine of reviewing, revising and working on the world building for the novel. That latter one is just reading a lot. I recommend it.

The other thing I discovered that allowed me to continue working professionally and on my writing was the speech-to-text option in Windows 11. It is an accessibility that allows you to dictate directly through your device microphone and the tool will transcribe it word for word.

Use the Window key + H to access the tool. Read more here.

My personal use case is for email and light writing, but like most things its not perfect.

Its awkward to use

To be clear, this is not like using Alexa or Siri. You are essentially talking to yourself and there is no fancy filter to fix your mishaps. In the beginning it will feel weird. You will mumble, stutter, say the wrong word, etc. but once you get used to it, it will be fine.

Consider what you want to write first, then speak slowly and clearly, enunciating every word fully. Don’t be alarmed if what is appearing on the screen is incorrect. Finish it first, then fix any mistakes.

You need editing

While impressive, its not perfect. If you’re not a native speaker, or have a tendency to mumble, or even speak too fast, it will have trouble recognizing what you say. Grammar is also finicky, but you can disable automatic-punctuation depending on your preference.

Just get the basics down and edit it.

It wont work public

Ignoring the social aspects of speaking to yourself in public, the tool doesn’t work well in noisy environments. As of writing this, its not capable of separating out your voice pattern from others.

At work I had the pleasure of accidentally transcribing most of what my colleagues said, which was hilarious to read, but made it unusable.

And lastly, a quick aside on the novel.

As of right now, I am back to my writing schedule, which remains the same 250 new words every day until the first draft is done. Right now, the novel has hit 47.700 words, which is about 2/3 of the way towards my end goal. I hope to have the first draft finished by the end of summer, so stay tuned if you want to keep up.

Stay safe and don’t break anything!

Leave a comment

Creating Accountability for your Creative Outlets

First off, I’m not saying this approach is for you. It’s an approach that I hope is good for me. Trying to be creative and build your skills, to make art if you will, is a fine endeavour and for some, it comes naturally. Of you can sit down and create that’s great; you get enjoyment out of it personally and a product at the end of it that you can choose to share. I’m thrilled for you and your brain.

My brain apparently doesn’t work like that. I need some kind of accountability, some way of telling (even if I’m not showing) myself and the world that I am creating something. The same goes for consistency at the gym, if I don’t record it some way and share it, I forget to go. And I don’t do it for recognition, to me its a cognitive trick, a way of tricking my brain into repeating a pattern that is good for me.

Gym is good. Creating is good. Let’s try the same trick that gets me to go to the gym.

This time around I intend to use public exposure to keep myself active. So, for now, I will be using the hashtag #creativityeveryday on my Twitter to log my progress in writing (ie. word count), photography (progress in photo projects), voice work (scripts created, recordings done and/or shared, etc.) and whatever niche thing I’m doing. Maybe you want to do the same, create a public record of your progress, maybe even share some of your work from time to time. It’s not a competition, but it might spur you to sit down every day and get something done. Whatever your metrics are should only matter to you.

If publicly voicing that you’re doing stuff isn’t for you, then you could try keeping a project journal where you log your progress (offline or online), or maybe just scheduling a 30-minute window every day where you work. Not logging what you’re working on or its progress, but just planning out that you will work.

Consistency is key to improvement, so create a framework that allows you to improve. If posting on Twitter doesn’t work, try a project diary. Diary doesn’t work? Try telling a friend. Got no friends? Try shouting it at the void above. Keep trying, if its something you really want to do but you’re lacking consistency.

Really what we’re looking to do is to ensure that if you want to build your skillset you can. So get to it.

Creativity Every Day

For a while I have been trying to get into the mindset of a creative, to create something consistently, even if what I create is only interesting to me. So this blog, formerly an inactive photoblog, has now been repurposed as a repository of whatever creative shenanigans I’m up to.

Shenanigans galore!

This includes, but is not limited to (as being creative can take you wildly diverse places):

  • photography
  • miniature painting
  • voice work
  • acting
  • improv
  • writing
  • podcasting
  • anything else that tickles my fancy.

Though currently, I am focusing on photography and voice work.

Why though? Well, to me creativity is a muscle. Currently a sad, atrophied and wholly un-oiled muscle that needs a proper workout. Why? Because a trained muscle gets stronger and works better, provides a consistent output and looks good. Its a matter of building a side of yourself that doesn’t necessarily have a purpose of other than itself.

So this is what I’m aiming to do, build the habit and get consistent creating stuff. I won’t post all of it since I do have some semblance of restraint, but I’ll do my best to share what I have, either here or on my various feeds linked somewhere on this site.

Have a great day unknown and amazingly clever reader. Got to create something amazing. Or terrible and dump it in the trash forever.

Writing Challenges

keep-calm-and-continue-writing-39I recently incorporated a Daily Writing Challenge to boost my creativity and daily output. And yes, I apologize for the lack of posts since Christmas, but personal issues, travel and reevaluating the direction of my life kinda took up a lot of time and energy, so the blog went on the back burner for a while. That while ended today.The concept of a Daily Writing challenge is to try and work with as many aspects of the written word as possible, to gain insight into different perspectives,prose, genre and sub genres, types of narratives, with the purpose of building skill, understanding and enhancing the creative juices. Continue reading Writing Challenges