Brandiwyn🎶 v.2026, also known as Michelle Tuesday, is a musician, educator and writer hailing from Columbus, Ohio.
La Bene Vita
You Are Welcome Here Life is good. Let's share it.
New Year, New Strategy For 2026, I launched a weekly topic rotation designed to help me stay d i s c i p l i n e d while ensuring that you, the reader, always know what to expect. Unfortunately, I have yet to acquire a million followers and gain official WDC "influencer" status, and I often find myself seduced by whimsy. Thus, my blogging strategy continues to evolve.
So, What Can I Expect?
I'm glad you asked. For now, until whimsy strikes again, here's what you can expect:
Subject Sundays
I'll publish an educational and/or discussion-provoking article, probably on one of the following subjects:. Music & music education The art and business of writing Owning & managing a small business Science & technology
Main Character Mondays
I'll establish goals every Monday and touch base about family, work, health and leisure.
Tuesdays through Fridays
I'll work on and update weekly goals. When I check off completed writing goals, I'll share the fruits of those labors, if applicable. These posts are likely to include blurbs about my day and the occasional rant, although I try to post rants at "What the Fork?"
* I can only commit to one review per week. If you would like your short story to be in my reviewing queue, please send me a WDC review request. Checkout my public reviews toget a sense of what to expect.
Wordsmitty ✍️ - Great question, and one I don't have the answer to, but I *think* (I'm not a lawyer), that falls into the domain of the second bullet point. I *think* some amount of a mix of AI generated text and human generated text is acceptable, to be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.
I frequently ask AI questions like, "What's another way to say XYZ" or "Please translate XYZ into Gen Alpha". I'm comfortable incorporating output in the form of words and phrases into my human-generated text. I don't see how it's any different from using a thesaurus or rhyming dictionary, for example. But I wouldn't think entire works can be AI-generated text. There's some mix amount that's acceptable, to be determined case-by-case, and I wouldn't know what that is, so I'll err on the side of words and phrases.
If anyone with legal expertise wants to chime in, though, I'm interested in a more qualified interpretation..
I've wondered about what the difference is between using human help, such as an editor, who may identify changes to the wording (words, pharses, sentences, etc.) that should be done to make the work better or clearer. If the writer uses those specific changes, does that fall into the same issue as AI providing the same changes that get used?
This is not meant to justify using AI, but to understand it all better.
Neil Peart, of Rush, was, and still is, widely acknowledged as one of the best, if not the best, drummer who ever lived.
It doesn't matter what one's opinion of Rush is as a band. The point is that other musicians recognized his mastery when he was alive. (Yes, I'm well aware of the joke that goes "What do you call a guy who hangs out with musicians? A drummer.")
In, I think, the 2010s, late in his life, the greatest drummer of all time took a break from performing to take drum lessons.
My takeaway from this is that there are certain pursuits, such as music, where the learning never stops. No matter how good you, or other people, think you are. Provided, of course, you're humble enough to know that there's always more to learn.
One of the lesser frequently-asked question among prospective clients of my music school is, "How long will it take for me/my child to master the instrument?"
Um.
This question never ceases to baffle me. I try to look at it from the perspective of non-musicians who truly have no clue what's involved, but in my imagining, that only makes it worse. Looking from the outside at the task of studying an instrument, with zero music experience, it might seem almost insurmountable. Yet some inquirers seem to believe that learning music has an end date, like it's a crash course: Learn Piano in Just Twelve Weeks! And then you get your certificate, and you're an official Certified Musician.
No.
I had this conversation with a dad seeking voice and/or piano lessons for his 6-year-old child yesterday. I gave him my typical initial reply, which satisfies less than half the askers of this question:
"The study of music is a lifelong endeavor."
The parent acknowledged what I was saying, but tried to clarify what he was asking:
"Yes, yes, of course. But how long until she can do it on her own?"
I understood exactly what he meant the first time. What he really wanted to know is, How much is this going to cost me? He's just trying to budget, and I get it. Being a parent is expensive.
I can't answer his question, though, because... it depends.
It depends on how quickly your daughter learns. It depends on how much she practices, which depends on how much she loves it and how much you enforce it at home. It depends on whether she reliably attends her lessons every week, and whether you stay consistently enrolled or withdraw every summer for travel.
Most importantly, it depends on your definition of mastery.
That's my favorite part of these conversations - the client can't define mastery to pin down what their question even is. They flounder and reword and shrug helplessly and expect me to define it for them, for me to explain what the end of learning looks like - because isn't that the question they're asking, after all?
Musicians with PhD's on their instrument are still learning.
How long does it take to master a language? I don't know about you, but at age 50, I'm still learning English, which is my native language.
How long does it take to master the art of writing? The mechanics of writing? The business of writing? The marketing of writing? We. Are. All. Still. Learning.
Hopefully, I have successfully answered the question, and you now know exactly how long it takes to master an instrument.
I'll close with a short (<2min) video about learning. With my apologies, it's a YouTube Short and cannot be embedded:
Goals for 2/2/26 - 2/9/26 Min 10 min/day on current novel Review work tasks list 3 days/week Two poems for "PromptMaster !" One short story for "The Bradbury" One themed blog post (music/writing) One review Current assignment for "26 Paychecks " Current assignment for "The Sprawling Ink Society"