Writing Everyday Benefits
- Kaith Tabaquero
- May 13
- 2 min read
Updated: May 14
Teaching Myself to Be a Master in Writing – in 6 Months
By: Kaith Tabaquero | May 13, 2025
Can small, consistent actions—like writing every single day—really lead to mastery? Over the next six months, I’m going to find out.

This is Blog 2 of my writing journey, and I’m now applying what I call the iterative mindset approach. If you’re unfamiliar with that term, feel free to check out my first blog: Why Goals Fail and How to Fix It, where I introduced the concept. In short, it’s about learning through small, repeated actions, constantly adjusting and improving along the way.
🎯 The Goal:
To write at least 300-500 words a day—every single day—for six months. The only exception will be the days I publish a full blog article here on my website. On those days, the published piece itself will count as my writing. Creating an everyday writing practice
Start Date: May 12, 2025;
End Date: November 12, 2025
The Trick:
No strict rules—except one: keep each writing session educational or informational. This isn’t a daily journal about what I had for lunch. Instead, I want to explore topics that provide value to others while helping me build my writing muscle.
The System:
At this stage, my only system is to spend at least 2 hours per day writing. I haven’t set a fixed time yet. Over the next three weeks, I’ll experiment with writing at different times to discover when I feel most productive and creative. I’m keeping the system flexible—for now—because I believe structure should evolve from practice, not the other way around.
Since I’ve only just begun this challenge, I don’t have any major reflections or results to share yet. But I wanted to explain why I’m doing this in the first place.
Why Writing?
Writing is a timeless and transformative skill. It teaches you how to communicate ideas clearly, tell compelling stories, and connect with others in ways spoken words sometimes cannot. More importantly, it gives you a voice—a way to express yourself with depth and authenticity.
But here’s the challenge: we’re now living in the AI revolution. With tools like ChatGPT and others, computers can now generate text in seconds. Books, blog posts, scripts—AI can do it all. So the question is, will human writing still matter?
As someone currently taking my master’s degree in digital marketing, I see the value AI brings. It’s efficient, fast, and surprisingly creative. But I also believe there’s something irreplaceable about the human touch—the personal experiences, the emotional intelligence, and the imperfections that make writing feel real.
That’s why I’m doing this. I want to sharpen my voice, develop my own thinking, and build a writing practice that’s truly mine. Over the next six months, I’ll write consistently, reflect frequently, and grow intentionally.
Let’s see what happens when you choose to show up—every single day.
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