Linda K Sienkiewicz

  • Home
  • Bio
  • Books
  • Blog
  • News
  • Etc.
    • Press Kit
    • Events
    • Art
    • Publishing Credits and Awards
  • Social Media
  • Email

Creative Brain vs. Numbers: A Love-Hate Math Story Problem

June 2, 2025 By Linda K Sienkiewicz

Math cartoon panel one shows a woman holding a pencil in front of a page that has "12,000 = twelve hundred" written on it. Cartoon panel two shows the woman looking alarmed with her mouth open, and an alarmed dog, with the words "WAIT! is it twelve hundred or thousand?" written in a burst

In My Head, Math is a Doodle

My brain glitches over whether to say hundreds or thousands. It’s as if I can’t associate the words with the numbers. It’s embarrassing. I feel like a child.

The other day Don sat down at the table with a paper and pen, and we talked numbers.
He wrote:

100 = This is one hundred.
1000 = This is a thousand.
12,000 = This is twelve thousand. . . and so forth.

Suddenly I was a young teen at the kitchen table in Independence, Ohio with my ever-patient father, who tried to help me with my homework by explaining a math concept for me. To him, it was simple, but I didn’t get it. I wouldn’t get it. Ever. That’s what my brain told me: “You will never understand this,” and big tears started rolling down my face because my brain throws up roadblocks when it comes to math. Poor Dad looked dumbfounded.

I think Don worries I’ll flub up one day and somehow we’ll lose hundreds of thousands of dollars. It’s a fear of mine, too.

Verbal Processing and Number Confusion

Dyscalculia is a learning difference that affects a person’s ability to understand and work with numbers, most commonly associated with doing calculations, estimating quantities, or remembering math facts.

Yet I’m good at figuring out complicated yardage for sewing and calculating the layout of a multi-opening mat design in picture framing, so I know I possess real-life math skills. So, what gives?

In my case, the glitch happens mainly in speech, which suggests the issue is verbal processing or retrieval of number concepts, rather than a core math disability. My brain momentarily mixes up verbal labels for numbers, especially under pressure or distraction, which understandably happens to peeps with ADHD/ADD.

notebook with "The Risk I Took was Calculated but Man, am I Bad at Math" written on the cover

The Creative Mind’s Quirk

Apparently, lots of articulate people struggle with number-word phrasing, especially under pressure. English doesn’t make it easy with weird exceptions and shorthand (like “twelve hundred” for 1,200 but not “twelve thousand hundred” for 1.2 million). It’s inconsistent and not everyone’s brain is built for perfect recall in real time.

This quirk in how the brain processes or retrieves verbal info, especially around numbers is common in people who are otherwise very strong in language or creative thinking. Aha. Now that makes total sense.

My brain is wired for creativity, pattern-making, and big-picture thinking. Numbers, especially when they’re abstract or verbal, can feel like they’re written in a different language from the one my brain naturally speaks.

The good news?

Creative brains are also amazing at building visual and intuitive systems. Here are a few tricks I recently discovered that I’m eager to try:

Rephrase: always say numbers in full, at least while practicing. Instead of “twelve hundred,” say one thousand two hundred. Instead of “fifteen hundred,” say one thousand five hundred. This builds mental clarity and reinforces the number’s value.

Sticky Word Associations: Link the number to a mental image or concept: “Hundred” = smaller stuff (like groceries, invoices, smaller goals). Thousand” is for big stuff (like money, house prices, populations). So, when you say, “twelve thousand,” think: That’s a big number. House money. When you say, “twelve hundred,” think: Smaller, everyday budget.

Visual Anchor Trick: Think in digits first, then speak.
When you hear “twelve hundred,” picture 1,200 in your head. When you hear “twelve thousand,” picture 12,000—notice the comma shift. Mentally check where the comma is placed.

Meanwhile, if you hear me mess up my numbers, just tell me it’s okay. I swear I know math—just don’t make me say it out loud


Thank you for visiting.
Linda K. Sienkiewicz is a writer, poet, and artist
Books: In the Context of Love | Gordy and the Ghost Crab | Sleepwalker
New novel,  Love and Other Incurable Ailments, coming fall 2026 from Regal House Publishing
Connect with Linda on social media: LinkTree

Leave a Comment Filed Under: It's Personal Tagged With: creative brains, creativity, math, quirks, right brain left brain

Not Everyone is Going to Like You

May 12, 2025 By Linda K Sienkiewicz

For the camera and beyond: When I was a girl, my father would often encourage me to clown around for the camera. We enjoyed being silly together, but I soon learned to enjoy acting out. In this … Continue reading >>

2 Comments Filed Under: It's Personal Tagged With: ADHD, authenticity, identity, wellness

Dinner with Elmore Leonard (sort of)

April 28, 2025 By Linda K Sienkiewicz

portrait of writer Elmore Leonard hangs on a restaurant wall in Michigan

A side of grits and a portrait of the Dickens of Detroit The specials at a local restaurant the other evening were called "A Taste of New Orleans," and my Blackened Twin Filets Diablo with jumbo … Continue reading >>

3 Comments Filed Under: It's Personal

A (Mostly) Clean Challenge: Writing a Novel with Minimal Profanity

April 7, 2025 By Linda K Sienkiewicz

The question was: Could I do it? First of all, I didn't think profanity fit my forthcoming novel, Love and Other Incurable Ailments, and secondly, I like to give myself challenges as a way of … Continue reading >>

2 Comments Filed Under: It's Personal, Writing Tagged With: dialogue, Fiction, profanity

Yous got the last laugh: How my husband’s favorite pronoun was vindicated

March 17, 2025 By Linda K Sienkiewicz

black t-shirt with the word YOUS in white letters

Who are yous really? The first time I heard my husband refer to the people in our household collectively as "yous" I laughed out loud. I'd never heard the word. Donnie insisted it was a real word, … Continue reading >>

Leave a Comment Filed Under: It's Personal Tagged With: grammar, non-standard English, vindication, yous

How Diversity in Literature and Teaching Strengthens America

February 17, 2025 By Linda K Sienkiewicz

Missing Voices in High School Lit This post about teaching diversity comes from fellow writer, retired teacher and Detroiter John Jeffire, who graciously allowed me to share it here. As a young … Continue reading >>

Filed Under: It's Personal Tagged With: black history month, black voices, diversity, literature, teaching

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • …
  • 39
  • Next Page »

About Linda

Award- winning writer, poet & artist. Cynical optimist. Super klutz. Corgi fan. Author of two novels, a children's picture book, and five poetry chapbooks. More here.

Follow this Blog

Enter your email address to subscribe to Linda's blog...

Categories

  • Agents & Querying (7)
  • Art & Crafting (20)
  • Books (70)
  • Grief and Loss (19)
  • In the Context of Love (14)
  • It's Personal (230)
  • Publicity & Marketing (33)
  • What, Why, How (163)
  • Writing (111)

Let’s Connect!

Subscribe to my newsletter and never miss a giveaway, fun event, or an announcement!

Search this blog

Top Posts

  • Proper use of "I" and "Me" - Grammar Basics
  • Book Art: Crafting Paper Roses
  • Blackout Poetry - as creative as you want to get
  • Gen Z “Chaos Theory” Fashion
  • Quick Bicycle Helmet Visor How-to
  • What's so special about Howard Street?

Blog Tags

Agents anxiety art books children's books childrens books Christmas Clementine corgi crafting creativity Detroit dogs family fantasy Fiction grammar grief Historical Fiction humor idol talk loss love marketing memoir motivation Music mystery nonfiction novel pandemic poet poetry Publishing reading romance sewing sexual assault shame short stories social media storytelling suicide writing writing tips
  • Home
  • Bio
  • Blog
  • Books
  • Recent News
  • Social Media

Recent Blog Posts

  • Creative Brain vs. Numbers: A Love-Hate Math Story Problem
  • Romance rides high on the genre wave. Maybe.
  • 10 Character Tips Every Novelist Should Know
  • Not Everyone is Going to Like You
  • What, Why, How: Poet Karin Hoffecker
  • Dinner with Elmore Leonard (sort of)
  • Beyond the Smile: Elevating Character and Emotions in Writing
  • A (Mostly) Clean Challenge: Writing a Novel with Minimal Profanity

Blog Tags

Agents anxiety art books children's books childrens books Christmas Clementine corgi crafting creativity Detroit dogs family fantasy Fiction grammar grief Historical Fiction humor idol talk loss love marketing memoir motivation Music mystery nonfiction novel pandemic poet poetry Publishing reading romance sewing sexual assault shame short stories social media storytelling suicide writing writing tips

Search

Let’s Connect!

Subscribe to my newsletter and never miss a giveaway, important event, or publishing announcement!

  • Home
  • Bio
  • Books
  • Blog
  • News
  • Etc.
  • Social Media
  • Email

Copyright © 2025 · Website design & development by Little Leaf