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Welcome to the Steno Wizard's Realtime Journey!






Remember when life was simple and all you had to do was make a selection on what your steno really meant? Those days are long gone.





Reporters must get themselves into top realtime form to compete in today's job market. This is my contribution toward ALL of us reaching the realtime goal.



My Steno Wizardry concept is based on the idea that writing realtime actually doesn't require magic -- just hard work, determination, and a little bit of FUN imagination.



My hope is my sharing of the ideas I've incorporated into my realtime journey will assist you in yours.



Wednesday, March 18, 2026

OBSERVE LIKE A PRO


This briefing strategy comes from Ed Varallo, a stellar speed contest winner and writer.

 __________________________________________________________________________

                                                      A Briefing Family That Watches Everything

 

Monday, March 16, 2026

⚖️ LAW IN ONE STROKE

 

When you’re writing testimony, hearings, and depositions, the word “law” shows up constantly. The good news? With these one-stroke briefs, you can write entire legal phrases instantly.


Mastering these strokes = faster writing and cleaner realtime.


🧠 The Base Stroke

Think of this as your foundational stroke.

HRAU = law

Once you know this base, you can quickly add endings and build dozens of legal terms.


⚖️ Core Legal Words

   Word

Steno

    law

HRAU

   laws

HRAUZ

   lawyer

HRAUR

   lawyers

HRAURZ

   lawyering

HRAURG

   lawsuit

HRAUT

   lawsuits

HRAUTS

  💡 Memory Tip:

Most of these just add a simple ending sound to HRAU.



👩‍⚖️ Legal Professions & Government

   Word

Steno

    Lawmaker

HRAURBG

   Lawmakers

HRAURBGZ

  These often appear in legislative testimony and political news.




🚓 Law Enforcement

   Phrase

Steno

    law enforcement

HRAUFRPLT

   law enforcement officer

HRAUFR

   law enforcement officers

HRAUFRZ

  


🏢 Legal Workplaces

   Phrase

Steno

    law firm

HRAUFRPL

   law firms

HRAUFRPLZ

   law office

HRAUFS

   law offices

HRAUFSZ


⚖️ Lawful vs. Unlawful — A Powerful Pattern

   Word

Steno

    lawful

HRAUFL

   lawfully

HRA*UFL

   unlawful

TPHRAUFL

   unlawfully

TPHRA*UFL

  

💡 Pattern Trick to Remember

In many steno theories, TPH- can represent the prefix “un-” in the stroke.

So when you add TPH- in front of HRAUFL (lawful), you instantly create:

TPHRAUFL = UN + lawful = unlawful

This makes it a logical, memorable stroke rather than something you have to memorize.


What does the asterisk do?

The asterisk (*) helps turn the word into an “-ly” ending.

Think of it like this:

  • HRAUFL → lawful
  • HRA*UFL → lawfully
  • TPHRAUFL → unlawful
  • TPHRA*UFL → unlawfully

Just one small key turns the word into an adverb, which appears constantly in legal writing and testimony.


  👨‍👩‍👧 Family “In-Law” WordsThese appear constantly in testimony.

   Word

Steno

    brother-in-law

PWROERPBL

   daughter-in-law

TKAURPBL

   father-in-law

TPAERPBL

   mother-in-law

PHOERPBL

   sister-in-law

STAURPBL

   son-in-law

SOPBL

  


📜 Common Legal Phrase

as a matter of law

Steno: SPHAFL

This phrase appears frequently in motions, rulings, and jury instructions.




🚀 Speed Builder Challenge

Practice writing these phrases:

  • law enforcement officer
  • unlawful conduct
  • the lawyer filed a lawsuit
  • brother-in-law testified
  • as a matter of law

⏱ Try writing each 10 times without hesitation.




💡 Pro Reporter Insight

The fastest writers don’t just memorize briefs —

they see the patterns.

Once HRAU = law becomes automatic, dozens of legal terms become instant one-stroke writing.


🧠 Reporter Insight

Small keys like the asterisk and prefixes like TPH- (un-) are powerful speed tools. When you combine them with a strong base like HRAU (law), you can write entire legal concepts in one clean stroke.

Saturday, March 7, 2026

✨ IF You Believe… You Can Write It! ✨

 Power Phrases for Steno Success

One tiny word can open a world of possibility: IF.

In writing, “if” phrases show up everywhere — testimony, Q&A, conversations, arguments, and everyday speech. The more comfortable you are with them, the smoother and faster your writing becomes.

And here’s the best part:

If you believe you can do this… you absolutely can.

Every great reporter once sat exactly where you are now — practicing phrases, building muscle memory, and learning to trust their fingers.


🖐 The Foundation Stroke

Your basic IF stroke:

TP

From there, you can easily add vowels and endings to create powerful, natural phrases.


⭐ Core “If I” Phrases

Steno

Phrase

TP EU

if I

TP EUBG

if I can

TP EUBGD

if I could

TP EUD

if I had

TP EUF

if I have

TP EURL

if I recall

TP EURPBD

if I understand

TP EUPT

if I want

TP EUPTD

if I wanted

TP EUFS

if I was

TP EUFPBT

if I wasn't

TP EURP

if I were

💡 These show up constantly in testimony such as:

  • If I recall correctly…
  • If I understand your question…
  • If I could explain…

⭐ “If He” Phrases

Steno

Phrase

TP E

if he

TP EBG

if he can

TP EBGD

if he could

TP EPBZ

if he knows

TP EPTD

if he wanted

TP EPTS

if he wants

TP EFS

if he was

TP ERP

if he were

TP ELD

if he would

These phrases pop up frequently in narrative testimony.


⭐ “If We” Phrases

Steno

Phrase

TPWE

if we

TPWELD

if we held

TPWERP

if we were

TPWAOER

if we're

Short, efficient phrases help you keep up with natural speech flow.


⭐ “If You” Power Phrases

Steno

Phrase

TPU

if you

TPUR

if you are

TPUBL

if you believe

TPUBG

if you can

TPUBGD

if you could

TPUFR

if you ever

TPUFL

if you feel

TPUG

if you go

TPUGZ

if you guys

TPUD

if you had

TPUF

if you have

TPUFD

if you have had

TPUPBS

if you notice

TPURL

if you recall

TPURZ

if you recognize

TPUZ

if you see

TPUPT

if you want

TPUPTD

if you wanted

TPUFS

if you was

TPURP

if you were

TPURPBT

if you weren't

TPULD

if you would

TPURPB

if your Honor

🌟 A Little Steno Motivation

Think about this:

  • If you believe you can improve, you will.
  • If you keep practicing, your fingers will learn the patterns.
  • If you trust the process, speed will come.

Stenography is not about perfection — it’s about progress.

Every phrase you learn becomes another tool that helps your writing flow faster, cleaner, and more confidently.


💬 Remember

If you believe…

you can write it.

Keep showing up.

Keep practicing.

Your future reporting self will thank you.



Tuesday, March 3, 2026

⭐ Let’s talk about two tiny words that carry massive power in your writing: DO and DID.

 

 On the surface, they seem simple. But in testimony? They are everywhere.

Look at how much ground you cover just from these families alone:

DO phrases

  • TK O → do
  • TK O U → do you
  • TK O UF → do you have
  • TK O U PB G → do you think
  • TK O U RP L D → do you recommend

DID phrases

  • TK → did
  • TK U → did you
  • TK UF → did you have
  • TK U PB → did you know
  • TK R O FR B GT → did there ever come a time


Notice something powerful?

✨ The structure is consistent.

✨ The patterns repeat.

✨ One small vowel shift changes tense — and multiplies your output.


When you master these phrase families, you’re not just memorizing outlines. You’re:

• Building reflexes

• Reinforcing question structure

• Training tense control

• Increasing realtime flow

• Reducing hesitation at high speeds


In depositions, trials, and Q&A-heavy material, these combinations fire constantly:

“Do you recall…”

“Do you understand…”

“Did you go…”

“Did you ever see…”

“Did you tell us…”


When these are automatic, your brain is free to focus on the unexpected material instead of the predictable scaffolding of questions.

That’s why drilling DO/DID phrases isn’t busy work — it’s skill stacking.

Small words.

High frequency.

Huge return on investment.

This week, challenge yourself:

✔ Write them in drills.

✔ Write them in dictation.

✔ Practice switching DO → DID instantly.

✔ Feel how little movement changes tense but keeps the pattern intact.

You are building speed through structure.

You are building confidence through repetition.

You are building professionalism through control.

And that’s exactly how strong realtime writers are made.

Keep stacking the wins 💪


Monday, March 2, 2026

🎯 ONE-STROKE “-TUDE” POWER WORDS

Because altitude is great… but speed is greater.

If you’re using one stroke for these “-tude” words, you are officially working smarter, not harder. These are beautiful examples of pattern recognition + theory trust = SPEED.

Let’s group them so your brain sees the magic.


✈️ Big Measurement Words

  • Altitude – ALTD
  • Amplitude – AFRPLTD
  • Magnitude – PHAGTD
  • Latitude – HRATD
  • Longitude – HROPBGTD

🧠 Why this is great:
These are academic, technical, expert-witness kind of words. And you’re writing them in ONE stroke. That’s elite efficiency.


💪 Strength & Character Words

  • Gratitude – TKPWRATD
  • Fortitude – TPORTD
  • Certitude – SERTD
  • Solitude – SOLTD
  • Servitude – SEFRBTD
  • Turpitude – TURPTD

🧠 Notice the pattern?
You’re keeping the base word sound clear and letting -TD cleanly represent -tude. That consistency is what builds speed confidence.


🎓 Vocabulary Power Words

  • Attitude – ATD
  • Aptitude – APTD
  • Ineptitude – TPHEPTD
  • Platitude – PHRATD
  • Plenitude – PHREPBTD
  • Multitude – PHULTD

🔥 Why These Matter for Speed Building

There is only so much speed in your fingers.
But there is infinite speed in good briefing.

Every time you:

  • Write one clean stroke
  • Avoid stacking two strokes
  • Trust your theory

…you reduce hesitation.

And hesitation is the real enemy of realtime.


🏁 Mini Drill (Say it out loud. Write it once.)

“Her attitude of gratitude showed fortitude despite the magnitude of the altitude.”

If you can write that smoothly, you are building serious control.


🎤 Final Thought for Students

When you master families like -tude, you stop writing letters.

You start writing language.

And that’s when steno becomes powerful. 💫