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Welcome to my blog, where I share stories, writing tips, inspiration, research, and whatever else sparks joy. Here, you'll find a little bit of everything from behind-the-scenes of my writing life to creative resources and random musings.

  • Feb 4
  • 1 min read

Updated: Feb 21

Okay. Fitting in quality writing time is the challenge. Here's a solution.


Voice memos. Dictating into the program and (ideally) watching incredible word count fly. (SOME weird mistranslations, but that's okay. Easy to fix in editing rounds.)


But, anyone else like me and find it embarrassing or awkward to speak it aloud? And whenever I say it, my ideas don't flow so well as when typing?


Here's the truth


Voice memos are a different skill to typing, and it’s totally normal to feel awkward at first. But it’s a learnable skill, and if it helps increase your word count, it might be worth experimenting with!


Maybe start super casually, like:


Narrating ideas, not prose → Instead of trying to “write” out loud, just brain-dump ideas: “Okay, in this scene, the character is feeling X because of Y, and maybe she does Z…”


Speaking in fragments → You don’t need full sentences. Even half-formed thoughts can help you get unstuck later.


Doing it in private first → If embarrassment is a barrier, try it when no one’s around just to get used to your voice.


No pressure to make it perfect—it’s just another tool to test out. You might end up hating it, or it might surprise you.


I'm going to try it out. Try to overcome the awkwardness and see if I can make my ideas flow smoother spoken too. (Might help with my awkwardness talking in reels or things too!)


Would love to hear if anyone else tries it out too and how they go.


Author life has taught me a lot about fitting my creative dreams around a busy day job and family life 👇🏽


Juggling creative dreams around a job and family life is hard. We all know it. And I often feel like there’s never enough time, to the point I envy Stephenie Meyer's vampires and their lack of need for sleep. 😅 But honestly, these years of writing around life’s demands have taught me some invaluable lessons, and I often get asked how I fit everything in.


So here's a quick run down of how I handle writing books around job and baby and exercise and ... [the list of need-to-dos goes on and on ...]


✨ Building resilience – There are days when the words just won’t come, or life gets in the way. But showing up anyway—even for a tiny step forward—has been my mantra. Each morning when my 'stupid o'clock' (according to my dad) alarm goes off, and it's cold and dark and I want to roll over, I tell myself 'this is my origin story' and I get up and run through my morning routine. Even if it's condensed. Even if it's just 10 minutes.


✨ Determination and saying 'no' – Carving out time for your dreams isn’t easy, but it’s worth it. I’ve learned to fight for what lights me up, even when it means saying 'no' to other things. And saying 'no' to other things is hard. It's not expected in this society. So that's a big lesson: think about what you're going to say 'no' to when you have something more important you want to do. Is it no TV? No alcohol? No weekend layins? You've got to be strict with yourself and prioritise.


✨ Matching my life to my values – Writing isn’t just something I do; it’s part of who I am. I feel odd on the days I can't do it. Aligning my daily choices with that has brought so much clarity and peace. It took YEARS to do. YEARS to action. YEARS to allow myself that. So what are your values?


Try this: If you need to google a giant list of values, write all the ones that resonate, and then trim them down to your top 5 values (this is what I did), then I recommend this. It gave a whole new perspective to my lifestyle.

✨ Scheduling personal priorities – I’ve made writing time as non-negotiable as work meetings or daycare pickups. It’s not always perfect, or 'enough' time, but it’s mine. What you put in your calendar is what you prioritise, so get it in there. Even if it's only 10 mins a day. You know what they say: 'Show me your calendar, and I'll show you what's important to you.' So I HAD to get creative work and exercise on my calendar.


✨ Waking up early – Early mornings have become my creative sanctuary. There’s something magical about working while the world sleeps (and, importantly, my son, because I'm sure all parents know no work gets done with a toddler climbing all over you!) and letting the words flow. Now, I know some people are night owls VS morning larks like me. That's okay. It took waking up at 'stupid o'clock' for me, but your creative time might be late. Find your creative time, and use it.


✨ Working little by little – Dreams aren’t built in one day. I’ve learned to celebrate the small wins—500 words here, an edited chapter there—because they all add up. I still have moments when I mourn long, beautiful writing time with lots of words. Still feel like a failure when I can only have ten minutes. But then I check myself, and remind myself that at least I'm still plodding forward. And over a year, that's still a lot of progress.


I'll throw in the old '0.1% progress every day' nudge here.

This life has its challenges, but it’s taught me that progress, not perfection, is the goal. It takes a while to learn. I still catch myself in the perfectionist mindset. But writing isn’t always glamorous—it’s messy and raw and sometimes exhausting—but it’s also deeply fulfilling.


And it'll be the same for whatever creative lifestyle you're seeking.


If you’re chasing your creative dreams, I hope you’ll give yourself grace. Work on them bit by bit, show up even when it’s hard, and keep your why close. It'll help you through the tough times.


So, take a moment today to reflect on your creative dreams. What small step can you take right now to move closer to them? I like to remind myself 'Just one thing a day'. What one thing can you do each day to shuffle towards your goals?


Remember: even the tiniest effort counts.

How about you? How do you balance your creative pursuits with the rest of life?



I'm currently reading The Diary of a CEO by Steven Bartlett. My husband and I watch his podcast, by the same name of the book, and Steven's reflections on growth really hit home. I'm at a time where I'm working harder in my own growth as an author, and so this book quote below seemed perfect to share a little book lesson with you all. I hope it helps you all grow as creators too.



When you're a new creator, it's easy to feel like you're not good enough. Not qualified. Not worthy of people seeing and buying your work. I get it. I was the same, and honestly, still am. It takes a long time for that to change.

And what I've learned is that only doing, only creating your work, will be what changes that.


There's no amount of studying the thing that will help you become good at it. Really, the only way to become good is by doing.


Showing up. Practising every day. Writing book after book after book.


I'll be honest. I wish I'd started with smaller projects. Got used to my voice. My writing style. Found my audience. Instead, I had this massive vision for a chunky trilogy, and while I had so much fun writing it, if I started over, I'd wait and make that maybe my third set of work. Try out a couple of shorter books first.


Just show up and practise writing books.


I've learned more about writing and publishing books by actually writing and publishing them than I could from anything else.


Each book I write feels smoother, more manageable, more fun, and I'm finding my systems.


Marketing and finding my audience is still the challenge. I've always been the sort of person who'd rather just write than to be on socials, but I know I need to do both now.


So I'm starting at level zero for socials. But that's okay. You grow by doing what you're unqualified for, right?


So if you're at the start of your book journey, or feeling stuck, I want you to embrace this book lesson from The Diary of a CEO.


Don't worry. You don't HAVE to be qualified yet. That's why you're doing to write. To create. To show up for yourself and your goals.


Come back in a year's time and tell me how you've grown. Guarantee it'll be more by doing.


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