Many of you challenge yourselves with long-term blog projects, from daily urban sketches to a weekly short story series. As we say goodbye to 2015, let’s look at how a sketcher, a poet, a short story writer, and an essayist have met their daily and weekly goals.
Olena Bodnarchuk: a sketch a day
Olena Bodnarchuk is a sketcher from Ukraine and is currently studying graphic design in Germany.
My sketch-a-day project was a spontaneous idea that felt so good and inspiring that I couldn’t ignore it. A passenger on a train saw me sketching and asked, “You’re making one drawing a day, aren’t you?” The next moment, I knew what I’d be managing in the next 365 days.
I get my inspiration from daily life. I notice beauty in ordinary situations and watch people on buses or on the subway. At any moment, I can take out a sketchbook and start creating. And you don’t need special conditions to be an urban sketcher! (Although it’s good to be really mobile.)
It’s easy to keep myself on track because sketching brings me so much joy. What I love about this habit is that quantity becomes quality. It feels like a tiny step I make each day, which then leads to my development in the long term.
Yi-Ching Lin: 3 bite-sized posts a day
Yi-Ching Lin is a writer, poet, and photographer in New York City.

What do escaping a party, vacuuming on the holidays, taking on daylight saving time, and realizing you’ve run out of toilet paper on Monday morning all have in common?
It happens to all of us.
Writing is a good kind of stressful. Every morning, I wake up, and writing hangs over my head as I make breakfast and sit down to write. I am constantly three posts away from heading out the door — one photo, a list of five randomly selected words, and a piece of writing. While the first two arrive more easily, it’s the third that can keep me stuck to my chair. In fact, it’s sometimes the photo and the threewordsaday that help to get the juices flowing. You can call them my “tricks.”
The other “trick” to writing and posting daily is observation. Imagine collecting all the little things that happen in a day and binding them together as a coloring book, so when you sit down, you can flip open a page in your mind and color it in. Inspiration becomes turnkey.
Writer’s block is a real fake thing. It immobilizes, but doesn’t have to paralyze. Some words are just slower to come.
I write because Writing is a box under the category Creativity under the list Happiness that I have the luxury of checking off every morning. For nearly six years, I committed to writing and posting daily because on the days I didn’t write, I felt an itch of discontentment, and sooner or later, I realized it was because I hadn’t created something.
Writing with readers is better than writing without readers. To be honest, after I’ve checked the Writing box, I’m good to go — literally and spiritually. But, it’s the readers who somehow magically keep me connected. They are neither my motivation nor my inspiration, but they breathe new life into the words, and for that, I am enlightened and grateful.
I try to catch and respond to every comment. I don’t stress about “capturing the momentum” on well-read days, only about writing daily and appreciating those who take the time to comment.
Finally, writer’s block is a real fake thing. It immobilizes, but doesn’t have to paralyze. Some words are just slower to come. I write other words for the time being.
Andy Townend: a story every Thursday
Andy Townend, a blogger with a love of photography, writing, and poetry, is currently living in Brussels.

Photography is my passion. I launched belgradestreets to share my perspective on life in Belgrade. Its sibling, belgianstreets, followed three years later. In each case, I aspired to share my story.
I created andytownend.com as a third space to experiment with writing and photography. I’m fascinated by the craft but considered creative writing a bridge too far. Encouraged by friends on WordPress.com, I signed up for Blogging U.’s Writing 201: Poetry, and subsequently, Writing 101. The camaraderie, engendered by the course organizers and my fellow participants, inspired me to let go and just write.
I set myself a tough challenge: I would write a serial story, dark | side | thursday. Each Thursday, I publish a new episode of exactly 500 words, accompanied by one of my photographs. The story is dark. It allows me to shine a light on some challenging issues to see a different perspective. I’m more than halfway through a 52-week writing project that I kicked off in May. It’s a liberating and inspiring experience.
While I’m using great writing tools to help me organize, plot, and collate my ideas, each new episode is often “shot from the hip,” a little like my photographic style. The characters, and the world in which they live, are fictitious, although I often hold a mirror up to real events, recent and from the past, when describing a place or emotion.
The story’s not over.
Michelle Ardillo: an essay a week
Michelle Blanchard Ardillo is a writer, Louisiana native, and language arts teacher in Washington, DC.
“Cajun Girl in a Kilt” is a nickname my husband gave me, born of my unique blend of personality traits stemming from having a Cajun dad and a Scottish mom. My site came about because in spite of wanting to be a writer, I had no idea how to actually become one. Even as a little girl I dreamed of being a writer, asking Santa for a typewriter one year. For 20 years I wrote legal documents, mostly lease agreements for tenants of shopping centers and malls, but the impetus for my “essay a week for one year” project came from a career change and eight years of teaching literature and writing to middle school students, making me want to focus on my own creative writing. A self-imposed deadline of midnight on Sunday was enough to awaken my competitive spirit, and I am proud to say that even during the most trying times of my father’s illness and death, I never missed a week.
A self-imposed deadline of midnight on Sunday was enough to awaken my competitive spirit . . .
On December 27, Michelle published her final essay of her yearlong series. “Am I a writer now, 52 weeks later?” she asks. Read her reflection on the experience.
Many of my essays focus on the culture, food, faith, and people of my Louisiana upbringing, but I also write about some of my lifelong obsessions like reading, the performing arts, and the British Royal Family, as well as more recent obsessions like making jam and poetry. My cast of characters includes my husband, two daughters, and my dog Puccini, but for inspiration I sometimes draw upon my most widely available resource: the developing minds and personalities of the pre-teens and teenagers I teach.
Do you plan to experiment with any projects in 2016?
My resolution this year is to keep a blog active and to not be afraid to post my poetry, short stories, and work I do on campus. I get really vulnerable when I post my work. In particular to work about my mental illness. On my blog I have a post called “Inhale Harder” and shared it with my family which was hard for me but now I feel free!!! Thank you for this post, my resolution is to post honestly.
LikeLiked by 11 people
This is inspiring and a great push to do more on my blog this year. Some seriously talented bloggers out there 🙂
LikeLiked by 4 people
How splendid! I joined WordPress at the end of 2015 to get the ball rolling on my own attempt to write a poem a day after never being one to publicly share my writing/poetic thoughts. I’d never come across these blogs, and look forward to delving into them! Thanks for sharing. ’tis a year for growth! 🙂
LikeLiked by 6 people
That’s a really inspiring and it helped me alot… I’m new to blogging and this pushes me to go further!
LikeLiked by 5 people
Welcome to the Blogger’s Community! 🙂
LikeLiked by 5 people
I would like to write an essay every week related to psychology,counselling,and psychotherapy.In addition,I may write about ‘science of the nature of psyche, Indian system of medicine, and herbs.Thanks.
LikeLiked by 7 people
“…on the days I didn’t write, I felt an itch of discontentment, and sooner or later, I realized it was because I hadn’t created something.” This may have been my favorite line. It is so relatable to me.
This was a cool look into a few individuals methods and a very timely post indeed. A friend and I were just discussing how we go about regimenting our writing (both fairly differently) but it has all been encouraging as we aim to create more.
LikeLiked by 5 people
I’m trying to do a Daily Photo upload for a Project 366 – as it’s Leap Year.
https://travelnotes.wordpress.com/tag/daily-photo/
LikeLiked by 3 people
I love this! Thanks for rounding them up! Maybe a new challenge for 2016?
http://bikurgurl.com
LikeLiked by 2 people
Definitely feeling inspired after discovering this compilation! Just started a blog, hope it’ll last! Thanks for this!
LikeLiked by 4 people
Yes! I’ve challenged myself with this writing project for 2016. The daily commitment will force me to finish a writing piece every day, ushering my stories out of their perpetual existence in my literary purgatory. But it wasn’t enough of an artistic endeavor to write everyday, I wanted to group these pages from my life into a theme…LIFE CLUBS
As virtual members of imaginary clubs, we are all linked by the life experiences that bind us. Life Clubs are the imaginary threads of how we are connected to one another.
I’ve lived through 4 decades of stories – joining many clubs along the way. The Immigrant Club, The Tattoo Club, The I Lived through 9/11 Club. The Marriage Club, The Parenthood Club, The Divorce Club. The Co-Parenting Club, The I’m Dating a Clown Club, The My Modern Family Trumps Yours Club. We have all inadvertently joined a club, and until your official initiation, you can’t understand what it’s truly like to be a member.
http://www.heartseverywhere.com
LikeLiked by 5 people
What a fun site! I have my own challenge: to write a short story every day for a year. I’m five months into my project at http://www.myshortstoryaday.com, but still try to carve out time to read the work of others. Good luck everyone on your writing projects!
LikeLiked by 6 people
My “one a day” project isn’t starting in 2016, rather continuing. I write a haiku every day. I reflect on either human nature or Mother nature, and quite often both as I am seeing more and more how the two are deeply connected, and the words flow through me. It’s a ritual I’ve come to treasure. Today is day 105. https://thinkingofnow.wordpress.com/
LikeLiked by 4 people
I’m investigating the meaning of wisdom and exploring it through a few posts starting with my Orange Modus Operandi http://kathreenriel.com/2016/01/05/change-by-orange-modus-operandi/
LikeLiked by 2 people
Great to see how others achieved their goals in 2015 Cheri. I certainly felt a sense of achievement, and relief I might add, on December 31st when I posted my Day 365 post for the year and met the goal I had set for myself on January 1st: http://thechangingpalette.com/2015/12/31/studio-365-day-365/. Best wishes for 2016
LikeLiked by 2 people
Party All Week, Go To Church On Sunday operates weekly! I experimented with an introduction to a short story series by month, but I found that it’d be best to stick with the Party weeks. I wish everybody success in 2016. Keep posting! BTW I need some good blogs to follow… anybody?
LikeLiked by 4 people
Wow, all of these are so inspiring! My goal is just to post stuff at least twice a week (im going for three, with two regular additions and then a third just thrown in for fun whenever I can manage) My blog is new so it’s going to be exciting to see how it plays out. The sketcher was so cool!
LikeLiked by 5 people
I’m into the new chapter of my life. Getting tired of partying and doing unuseful and unnecessary things. I really wanted to write blogs. My intention is to enhance my writing skills and to be able to express and write what I felt or see around me. I want to share stories. To communicate other bloggers. But still doesn’t know how to be an efficient blogger/writer.
LikeLiked by 5 people
Really loved this post, it helps to know I’m not alone! I’ve resolved to post once a day in my new blog, writingdragonsblog.com, about my journey to write the first draft of my first novel, book 1 in a YA fantasy trilogy, called Finding Dragons. I’ve been doing great with the help of WordPress’s Blogging 101 course, and I hope I can stick with it the whole next year!
LikeLiked by 6 people