These are not resolutions, okay?
Yes, I wrote all the way back last year, that I don’t really believe in New Year’s resolutions. So much so that I then proceeded to list five of them, with the proviso that they were “gaming resolutions,” not real ones. So, I may as well continue along Self-Delusion Avenue into 2025, I thought.
So! There are a couple of non-RPG things I’d like to try to do more often:
- Practice my Japanese and improve my fluency before our big trip to Japan in the autumn
- Write more fiction that is not related to games

日本語の練習は大変だけど楽しいです。最近 Read Real Japanese Fiction という本を読み始まりました。その本の中には日本の著者六人のすばらしい短編小説が読めます。一文ずつ、英語の説明もあるから分かりやすいです。それ以外、Netflixで日本のテレビ番組をよく見て日本語のリスニングの練習もできます。日本語を話すことの練習もできればいいな。

For the second point, I thought I might use this very blog, dear reader… and perhaps, dear fellow writer…
Random Word Generator
In a now defunct writing group I was once a part of, we often used a random word generator to get our minds working on new short pieces of fiction. In fact, some of the short stories and flash fiction I posted here came from that group. I think we can all agree that I had mixed success. But, there is no doubt about one thing: it got me writing. I always found that, when my brain was working on the practical problem of fitting those randomly selected words into whatever it was I was writing, I was not focusing so much on the fact that I didn’t have any ideas. I let the words guide me into something resembling a story. After a while, I found the ideas for short fiction coming without the aid of the random words and so I would have to shoe-horn them in, which is an interesting exercise in itself. But the random words were the kickstart that I needed.
So I decided to use the same method again. Here is my first effort. I used this random word generator to come up with five nouns and five verbs:
Nouns I used
- Engine
- Clothes
- Thought
- Employer
- Investment
Verbs I used
- Summon
- Chase
- Determine
- Cheer
- Assess
This time, I thought I would challenge myself to write in a format I don’t think I have ever attempted before, a hundred word flash.
Present Imperative
by Ronan McNamee
Swim. Up to the air. Breathe. Curse your clothes. They catch every eddy, urging a return to drowning. Locate your employer. She bobs there on the surface; regards the depths. Consider her investment in you. Learn from her mistakes. Recognise the ice of the sea in your bones. Move. Chase survival, success. Stroke past her and her solitary Chu. Welcome the deep-freeze motivation. Summon your future. Allow it to cheer you, sustain you. Pause, paddle. Resist the chill in your blood. Hear the engine enter earshot. Determine the direction. Assess difficulty and distance. Chatter a grin. Swim.
Next Challenge

Here’s the plan. I’m going to generate five more nouns and five more verbs right now. I am going to take these words and come up with a 500 word piece of flash fiction. If you’re interested, dear reader, I would invite you to do the same. I’m going to post my piece on this here blog next Wednesday. If you want, you can leave yours as a comment under this post or under my post next week or on your own blog and link to it, or you can write it in that little notebook you keep just for yourself, or you can write it on the wind so only the birds and the gods can read it.
Here are the words for next week:
Nouns for next week
- development
- surgery
- union
- shopping
- system
Verbs for next week
- execute
- finish
- approve
- undertake
- take
And this is the best part: I’m going to do this every Wednesday until I decide I’ve done enough. Feel free to join me in this weekly writing challenge, dear reader. Or maybe just try it this once and see if you like it. One way or the other、 よろしくお願いします。