• Time for a Fresh Look! 🚀

    The site needs a bit of a refresh, so as they used to say it is under construction. As such things might not look right, work right, or even feel right. But only until everything is new and shiny. After that… who knows.

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  • Creating amongst the Chaos – Creative Field Notes

    This month has been productive despite global chaos, and I have noticed the importance of maintaining a positive and intentional creative practice.

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  • Mid to End Feb Creative Field Notes

    This week’s creative field notes include how I am keeping up with February Album Writing Month and coming up with a few other creative ideas.

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  • Imbolc: Creative New Starts

    January has been a difficult month for this creative minimalist. However, the festival of Imbolc is as good a time as any to make a creative new start. This week’s vlog explores recent creative highs and lows.

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  • My current journal set-up

    As we begin the new year of 2025, I’m excited to share my collection of journals with you in this week’s vlog. I have a new daily planner, as well as music and fiction journals, and various vocabulary notebooks.

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  • Odyssey my word of the year 2025

    My word of the year for 2025 is odyssey. It both a journey with a destination in mind and plenty of wiggle room for distractions.

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  • Journey — Weekly Creative Prompt

    journey weekly creative prompt

    Welcome to this week’s complete creative prompt. We begin with a single creative prompt word and expand it to inspire fiction writing, journaling, and a host of other creative activities. These creative prompts, are to give me, and anyone else who wants to join in, some focus on our creative work.

    When I created these prompts, I hoped I would be traveling around. I thought the lockdown and related international travel restrictions would be over. Part of my pilgrimage video series will relate to literal travel. Politics and continued Covid-19 issues have meant that I have yet to get very far. However, that doesn’t imply that the metaphor of travel isn’t far from my thoughts. Therefore, this week’s creative prompt is:

    Journeyan act of traveling from one place to another

    this is one of the few prompts that really means just one thing, however, that doesn’t limit its use in our creativity

    Let the prompt ‘journey’ inspire you in any area of creativity that you are interested in:

    • writing fiction
    • journaling
    • art journaling
    • songwriting
    • photography
    • painting
    • composing
    • blog posts
    • art therapy
    • anything that could use a little nudge to begin

    Let’s expand the word a little further…

    Fiction Writing Prompt

    The Fiction Writing Prompt, exploring the word journey, aims to stretch the literary muscles. No rules. No word counts. Simply write and explore.

    So it began, the way ahead and my destination before me. Here was my journey. - fiction writing prompt

    So it began, the way ahead and my destination before me. Here was my journey.

    Writing Prompt Expanded

    Travel can be for many things. We are asked upon entering a new country whether our visit is for business or pleasure. It could be a physical or spiritual voyage of discovery, and those are not always mutually exclusive. There might be travel with no fixed destination or involve no fixed return. But the journey itself is where we learn so much.

    This prompt is all about describing what is about to happen and then imagining the process and exploring the feelings of the narrator.

    • Do you know your route and destination?
    • Is your journey from and to a physical location, or metaphorical?
    • How do you feel as you begin this journey?

    The writing perspective is the first person. This makes it easier to explore the feelings of the character. The journey itself and everything else is open to your imagination. Will you explore a literal journey from one physical location to another, or will you use a journey as a metaphor?

    Let this writing prompt be an enjoyable literary journey for you, and may it help strengthen your writing skills as you journey toward the story’s destination.

    Journal prompt

    Journaling allows us to hold conversations on paper. From private diaries to creative art journals, we pour out our deepest thoughts. Our journals are the ideal place to plan and record our travels. Tickets obtained for the journey can adorn art journals or be added as ephemera in diary-type journals.

    Questions to answer, thoughts to explore, or images to create in your journal:

    • Write about a journey of personal discovery you have had or would like to have?
    • Find a recent ticket relating to a journey (it doesn’t have to be a travel ticket, it could be for parking or entry to an attraction) stick it in your journal and write about the journey and time away.
    • Do you enjoy going on a journey or do you feel anxious, why?

    Theory of General Creativity

    I now have ‘journey’ written on the board above my computer. I am confident it will inspire me on my creative journey this week. All creative work can be seen as a journey. We learn how to be creative; our journey involves learning and practicing. The journey begins with inspiration, travels through the process, and reaches its destination when the project is complete. Do you find one stage of this journey more difficult than the others? I find reaching the destination the most challenging part of my creative journey. However, just because one part of the journey is more difficult, it doesn’t mean we should never travel.

    Let ‘journey’ inspire your music, photography, and painting this week.

    Finally…

    As always, these creative prompts and ideas are optional and entirely open to your interpretation. Use them as a starting point for a short story, something a little more grandiose, or any creative project.

    As mentioned before, this isn’t a ‘challenge’ but the prompts can be used that way if you want. If you do create anything using them, I would love to see or hear about it. Leave a link in the comments below, or tag me #thecreativeminimalist on any social platform.


    Thank you for reading this post. Please share your thoughts in the comment section below.
    namaste
    d
    xox

    If you enjoyed this post please support my writing by making a donation of any amount.

    Sign up for my (ir)regular newsletter to keep up to date with my creative adventures, including special offers, and join me on Instagram | YouTube | Twitter | Pinterest

  • Reaching branches on a Wordless Wednesday

    Reaching branches on a tree in front of Abbey

    Thank you for reading this post. Please share your thoughts in the comment section below.
    namaste
    d
    xox

    If you enjoyed this post please support my writing by making a donation of any amount.

    Sign up for my (ir)regular newsletter to keep up to date with my creative adventures, including special offers, and join me on Instagram | YouTube | Twitter | Pinterest

  • Birth — Weekly Creative Prompt

    Birth weekly creative prompt

    Welcome to this week’s complete creative prompt. We begin with a single creative prompt word and expand it to inspire fiction writing, journaling and a host of other creative activities. These creative prompts, are to give me, and anyone else who wants to join in, some focus to our creative work.

    This month sees my birthday. This is a bitter-sweet time for me. It’s a celebration for another year survived, and with the pandemic, my gratitude is doubled. However, it is also a time when I reflect and consider the things I have not managed to do. I can get a little melancholic at this time, so I make an extra effort to look for potential and what might come into being in the year ahead. Therefore, this week’s creative prompt is:

    Birththe beginning or coming into existence of something

    this is the general definition of the word and I love the idea of potential in this meaning

    Let the prompt ‘birth’ inspire you in any area of creativity that you are interested:

    • writing fiction
    • journaling
    • art journaling
    • songwriting
    • photography
    • painting
    • composing
    • blog posts
    • art therapy
    • anything that could use a little nudge to begin

    Let’s expand the word a little further in some fiction and our journal…

    Fiction Writing Prompt

    The Fiction Writing Prompt aims to stretch the literary muscles. No rules. No word counts. Simply write and explore.

    Now, at last, everything would change. This was the moment, the birth of… fiction writing prompt

    Now, at last, everything would change. This was the moment, the birth of…

    Writing Prompt Expanded

    ABBA once sang ‘I have a dream’. Martin Luther King’s famous speech contained the same words. Many people dream of a better future, fight for hopes, rights, their children’s future. Many world-changing movements begin with a call to change, with a dream, a description of a different future. Although not all dreams and movements lead to improvement.

    This prompt is all about dreaming of a change to come. The change begins with a specific moment. The moment has arrived, and the future is given birth.

    • What is the event or action that creates the birth?
    • How does your protagonist and other characters feel?
    • Is the future being birthed positive or negative?

    The writing perspective is down to you. The birth event could be witnessed by one person or many. Your challenge is to imagine a future, then pinpoint and describe the event that triggers it all, the genesis event, the birth. Plotting events is a key writing skill. Being able to plot from an ending back to a beginning, or birth is also helpful. So enjoy and have fun, imagine a future and give birth to it at a single moment.

    Journal prompt

    Journaling allows us to hold conversations on paper. From private diaries to creative art journals, we pour out our deepest thoughts. Our journals are great places to dream and plan. We can give birth to ideas, intentions and other projects. For those who may be about to have a literal birth, recording precious moments and feelings can form part of your regular journal practice.

    Questions to answer, thoughts to explore or images to create in your journal:

    • Write three steps to take to birth one of your dreams?
    • What is the most amazing thing you have given birth in your life?
    • Write birth at the top of a page, and then dream in words or images below.

    Theory of General Creativity

    I now have ‘birth’ written on the board above my computer. I am confident it will inspire me on my creative journey this week. Now, I seem good at birthing ideas. It is the nurturing and developing of ideas that I struggle with. However, that doesn’t mean I should stop giving ‘birth’. Having a bank of ideas is always useful for the times when giving birth isn’t possible. Always be on the lookout for inspiration, you never know what it will give birth to.

    Let ‘birth’ inspire your music, photography, and painting this week.

    Finally…

    As always, these creative prompts are optional and entirely open to your interpretation. Use them as a starting point for a short story, something a little more grandiose, or any creative project.

    As mentioned before, this isn’t a ‘challenge’ but the prompts can be used that way if you want. If you do create anything using them, I would love to see or hear about it. Leave a link in the comments below, or tag me #thecreativeminimalist on any social platform.


    Thank you for reading this post. Please share your thoughts in the comment section below.
    namaste
    d
    xox

    If you enjoyed this post please support my writing by making a donation of any amount.

    Sign up for my (ir)regular newsletter to keep up to date with my creative adventures, including special offers, and join me on Instagram | YouTube | Twitter | Pinterest

  • Blame — Weekly Creative Prompt

    Blame weekly creative prompt @darrenrhill

    Welcome to this week’s complete creative prompt. We begin with a single word, a creative prompt, and expand it to inspire fiction writing, journaling, and a host of other creative activities. These creative prompts, are to give me, and anyone else who wants to join in, some focus to our creative work.

    Whenever a disaster, natural or otherwise, strikes — and with the nature of 24-hour news we are never far from hearing — after the initial shock we often want to know whether anyone was at fault. Our upset and anger and confusion need a little direction. We’re also quick at pointing the finger. We don’t like to consider how much we may be at fault. Therefore, this week’s creative prompt is:

    Blameassign the responsibility for a bad or unfortunate situation or phenomenon to (someone or something)

    this is a general verb definition, but I do like the use of the word phenomenon… it feels a little supernatural

    Let the prompt ‘blame’ inspire you in any area of creativity that you are interested:

    • writing fiction
    • journaling
    • art journaling
    • songwriting
    • photography
    • painting
    • composing
    • blog posts
    • art therapy
    • anything that could use a little nudge to begin

    Let’s expand the word a little further…

    Fiction Writing Prompt

    The Fiction Writing Prompt aims to stretch the literary muscles. No rules. No word counts. Simply write and explore.

    Was it our fault for entering the house? Or should we blame the person who summoned the ghost? - fiction writing prompt

    Was it our fault for entering the house? Or should we blame the person who summoned the ghost?

    Writing Prompt Expanded

    We all, to varying degrees, have a sense of justice. When something goes wrong, we want to know why and who is to blame. Quite often, there is no single source of blame. Things are very rarely black and white. And in this writing prompt, things are very unclear, perhaps even ghostly transparent.

    This prompt is all about exploring the concept of blame within a stressful environment. How often do characters in books and films argue about blame instead of getting out of harm’s way? A few thoughts to help.

    • Why did the group go to the house?
    • Why do different characters choose different things to blame?
    • Is it the sight alone of the frightening ghost, or does the ghost act menacingly?
    • And was it literally summoned?

    The prompt is a bit more prescriptive this week. The setting is a house, there is a group of people and, apparently, there is a ghost. However, beyond those things, where the story goes is down to you. Scare yourself and your readers with the ghostly apparition, and perhaps let the group turn on each other as they cast blame. But remember, if you don’t decide to write anything, you only have yourself to blame. Have fun and enjoy.

    Journal prompt

    Journaling allows us to hold conversations on paper. From private diaries to creative art journals, we pour out our deepest thoughts. Blame is serious. If we are blaming others for something, then we really need a good reason. If we are blaming ourselves, we need to make sure it is to take responsibility and make some changes. Blame has negative connotations and yet if responsibility is accepted, and actions changed, blame becomes the first step in being better people and improving the world we live in.

    Questions to answer, thoughts to explore, or images to create in your journal:

    • Write any bad decisions or choices you think you have made. Now write I blame myself over the top. Finally, paint or collage over what you have written. Don’t blame yourself, but commit to learning from what happened.
    • Do you find it easier to blame others or yourself? Why?
    • Have you ever been wrongly accused and blamed for something, and how did you feel?

    Theory of General Creativity

    I now have ‘blame’ written on the board above my computer. I am confident it will inspire me on my creative journey this week. Not only that, but I am always blaming myself for not finishing my creative projects. I find it easier to make excuses and blame myself instead of just getting on and creating. And blaming my tools, be they digital or not, is far easier than learning how to use them correctly or fixing them when broken. I think I need to stop blaming and do.

    Let ‘blame’ inspire your music, photography, and painting this week.

    Finally…

    As always, these creative prompts are optional and entirely open to your interpretation. Use them as a starting point for a short story, something a little more grandiose, or any other creative projects.

    As mentioned before, this isn’t a ‘challenge’ but the prompts can be used that way if you want. If you do create anything using them, I would love to see or hear about it. Leave a link in the comments below, or tag me #thecreativeminimalist on any social platform.


    Thank you for reading this post. Please share your thoughts in the comment section below.
    namaste
    d
    xox

    If you enjoyed this post please support my writing by making a donation of any amount.

    Sign up for my (ir)regular newsletter to keep up to date with my creative adventures, including special offers, and join me on Instagram | YouTube | Twitter | Pinterest

  • Imaginary figments Friday field notes

    screenshot of emerge in Logi Pro X
    fig 1

    An update, or excerpt, on what I have been creating and doing. Keeping myself accountable, even though I have forgotten to update here for a few weeks. Inspired by my imagination, here are some…

    Figments

    I am composing ‘emerge’. I think this will form part of a collection, the working title of which is currently ‘music to journal by’ – fig 1 is a screenshot of my work in progress. I’ll do a video update on the progress soon.

    I am writing again. I have set myself a monthly word count goal. I had a nagging feeling in my soul that I wanted to write. I have plenty of ideas but wasn’t getting around to writing any. So, I set myself a goal, a little more accountability.

    The music grimoire my songwriting journal hasn’t seen much action, but I have been working on a collection of songs. I’ll be back in the songwriting journal over the weekend.

    I am reading Norse Mythology by Neil Gaiman. Really enjoying the oral ‘storytelling’ vibe. I always know when I am enjoying a book because I write quotes:

    He had done as his dreams had told him, but dreams know more than they reveal, even to the wisest of the gods

    Norse mythology by Neil Gaiman

    I have been watching Brand New Cherry Flavor on Netflix. It was good, but I didn’t think it was great. There were some really nice ‘horror’ video effects. I quite liked those.

    I am thankful for all of you who read and encourage me on my creative path, and as such, I’d best get going and finish a few things.


    Thank you for reading this post. Please share your thoughts in the comment section below.
    namaste
    d
    xox

    If you enjoyed this post please support my writing by making a donation of any amount.

    Sign up for my (ir)regular newsletter to keep up to date with my creative adventures, including special offers, and join me on Instagram | YouTube | Twitter | Pinterest

  • Tiny friend on a Wordless Wednesday

    tiny spider on the arm of my chair

    A tiny friend came and sat on the arm of the garden chair. It then attached a thread of its spider silk and leapt into the unknown…


    Thank you for reading this post. Please share your thoughts in the comment section below.
    namaste
    d
    xox

    If you enjoyed this post please support my writing by making a donation of any amount.

    Sign up for my (ir)regular newsletter to keep up to date with my creative adventures, including special offers, and join me on Instagram | YouTube | Twitter | Pinterest