Chapter 3 - Beyond Addicted

I was hooked. The day after The Brackla Tattler launched, I decided I couldn’t stop there. Why wait for a competition when I could make my own newspaper? I got straight to work, fuelled by the rush of creating something from nothing.
This time, the front-page story was even bigger—or at least, it felt that way to me: “Riot at Strangeways Prison!” I was 11 years old, covering prison riots like a seasoned journalist.
Back then, I didn’t even have a computer. I was using my mum’s old typewriter for the text—each clack of the keys a declaration of my ambition. For the visuals, I raided stacks of old magazines, cutting out pictures and headlines to make elaborate collages. My bedroom floor became a sea of scraps, glue sticks, and ink-stained fingers.
I was beyond addicted. There was something magical about piecing it all together, watching a blank page transform into a story people could hold, read, and react to. The process consumed me in the best way.
Even though the Strangeways Gazette (as I called it in my head) never saw the light of day outside my bedroom, it didn’t matter. It was the act of creating that thrilled me—the feeling of pulling chaos into order, of telling stories that felt bigger than myself.
Looking back, I can see how those early newspapers planted a seed. I wasn’t just making collages; I was learning how to connect ideas, how to grab attention, and how to make people feel something. I had no idea then how important those skills would become.