How to turn your child’s love for video games into a creative writing project

Is your child obsessed with video games? What if their screen time could become story time?

Before you worry about “too much gaming,” consider this: modern video games teach world-building, character development, plot structure, and creative storytelling, the same skills used in creative writing. In this article, I share how you can turn your child’s love for Minecraft, Roblox, Zelda or other narrative games into a powerful creative writing project. If you’re a parent of a child or teenager who loves gaming, this could completely change how you see their hobby.

Let’s turn players into authors. ✍️

Read more here.

#CreativeWritingForKids #ParentingTips #ScreenTimeBalance #VideoGames #KidsWhoWrite #LiteracyMatters #YoungWriters #TolulopePopoola #WritingCoach #AccomplishPress

Creative Writing for Kids: The hidden skill that strengthens every other school subject

Parent, if you’re only thinking about English grades, you’re thinking too small. Creative writing builds critical thinking, academic strength across subjects, clear communication skills, resilience and confidence in your child.

The child who can structure a story can structure a science report. The child who can analyse a character can analyse a historical event. The child who can revise a draft can tackle a difficult maths concept.

Creative writing isn’t just a hobby. It’s a life skill.

If you want more than “just passing” for your child, read this article.

#CreativeWritingForKids #ConfidentLearners #CriticalThinking #ParentingWithPurpose #KidsWhoWrite

Featured Story Number #27 – The Superpower

On the last day of summer, four friends hold a long jump competition in a quiet driveway. But when one of them takes his turn, something impossible happens. Instead of landing on the pavement, he finds himself flying through his uncle’s grand manor house just like he did as a child. Moments later, he’s back on the driveway with his friends staring in shock.

Why professional support matters for young authors

If your child loves writing and storytelling but feels stuck, frustrated, or unsure how to improve, working with a children’s writing coach could make all the difference. While parents play an essential role in encouraging creativity, professional writing support helps young writers develop the technical skills, structure, and confidence they need to grow.

In this article, we explore how a children’s writing coach provides personalised feedback, teaches essential storytelling techniques such as character development and plot structure, and helps kids set achievable writing goals. Unlike traditional school writing lessons, creative writing coaching focuses on imagination, voice development, and real-world publishing insight tailored specifically for young writers.

The 30-day countdown: A stress-free marketing plan for your book launch

New article – You’ve written the book. The hard, lonely, soul-stretching part is done. And now it’s almost launch day, and suddenly everyone expects you to become a marketing expert overnight. If you’re staring at your calendar thinking, “I have no idea how to do this without burning out,” take a breath. You’re at the part no one warns you about.
A simple 30-day launch window works because it keeps momentum without overwhelming you. It gives you permission to show up imperfectly, talk about your book like a human, and build real connection instead of noise.

From bedtime stories to book deals: How to support your child’s writing dreams

When a child says they want to play football professionally, parents sign them up for training. When they show talent in music, we get them lessons and a proper instrument. But when they want to write? We hand them a notebook and hope for the best.

Taking your child’s writing ambitions seriously doesn’t mean pushing them into early burnout or turning creativity into a chore. It means recognizing that if they’re passionate about storytelling, they deserve the same support and structure we’d give any other meaningful pursuit.

Why most writing advice ignores real-life constraints

Most writing advice for aspiring authors comes from a good place. But most of it was written by people who don’t have your own life. They don’t know about your demanding full-time job, your hectic business, your kids who need help with homework, or your ageing parent who needs care three evenings a week. 

If you’re juggling a high-powered job or running a business and raising kids, your “free time” isn’t really free. You’re managing deadlines, clients, team issues, school runs, homework help, packed lunches, bedtime routines, and that invisible mental load that seems to follow you into every room.

So no, you’re not “lazy” or “undisciplined” if you’re not writing daily. You’re carrying a lot.

But I believe if you have a story inside you, you deserve the support to tell it – regardless of how busy, messy, or complicated your life might be.

Writing when you’re tired, not inspired

Too tired to write? That might be exactly when you should.

Some of the most honest writing I’ve done hasn’t come from inspiration or clarity. It’s come at the end of long days, when my brain was dull, my energy was low, and I didn’t have the strength to overthink.

The quiet truth: when you’re tired, your inner critic is tired too. That voice that nitpicks every sentence loosens its grip. You stop trying to be clever. You stop performing. And something raw, something real and true slips onto the page.

Waiting for perfect conditions is one of the fastest ways to stay stuck. Writing while tired isn’t laziness or lack of discipline. It’s often how work actually gets finished.

So if you’ve got ten quiet minutes tonight and a story that won’t leave you alone, don’t wait to feel inspired. Just write truthfully. That’s often more than enough.

What it means to take writers seriously, especially children

Children are natural storytellers. The worlds they create, the characters they invent, the questions they ask; those are not distractions from “real learning.” They are learning. And when their stories are dismissed as cute or unimportant, something powerful gets silenced.

Taking young writers seriously doesn’t mean pretending every story is perfect. It means listening, providing resources, offering guidance and celebrating effort, not just outcomes. It means saying, “Your voice matters.”

When children feel seen as writers, they don’t just write better stories, they grow into confident thinkers and communicators who aren’t afraid to share their ideas.

Why most writers edit too early and sabotage momentum

Your first draft is not meant to be impressive, it’s meant to exist. Stories are discovered by moving forward, not by endlessly fixing what you already know. Every time you switch from writing to editing, you slam the brakes on your creative momentum. No wonder the story stalls.