Monthly Archives: October 2012

Free Writing Workshops

Beginning in November – Free Writing Workshops in Columbus, Indiana

Saturday, November 17, 2012 – Bartholomew County Library Computer Lab

10 am to 12:30 pm

Thursday, November 29, 2012 – Bartholomew County Library Meeting Rm 3

6 pm – 8 pm

Saturday, December 1, 2012 – Bartholomew County Library Computer Lab

10 am – 12:30 pm

Saturday, December 8, 2012 – Bartholomew County Library – Conference Room

10 am – 12:30 pm

EACH CLASS WILL HAVE A DIFFERENCE FOCUS ON CREATIVE WRITING: Character development, plot, building suspense, mystery, romance, and writing for different genres.

If you are interested in signing up for any of these workshops, please email me to reserve your place as seating is limited.

EMAIL: sherry@traylorwritingservicescenter.com

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Building a New Business

This is certainly a difficult road to choose, the one of building your own business versus working for someone else. Little sleep, little money, and lots of effort in networking to build a client base. Most of my real writing work comes very late at night and into the early morning hours. The world is sleeping, including my dog, and I get to tap tap away on the keyboard, correcting, proofreading, and offering editing comments to clients who are fast asleep.

I have spent little time lately on my fiction writing while I am busy reading and editing for others. However, I still enjoy what I do very much. The creativity involved allows for more of my unique qualities to shine. I go out and take photographs when the sun comes up, or late at night when shadows prevail. My photographs are liked for some book cover designs and that is also a thrilling passion to fulfill.  Creation of art and meaningful words will likely always fill up my heart, no matter how late I work, or how few clients I have, the words will still fill my journals every night.

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At the Columbus Writer’s Conference 2012

I am in the Crump Theatre, historic 1800s theatre in downtown Columbus, Indiana. My vendor table is set up right by the bathroom, advertising my Traylor Writing Services Center editing service.  So, I literally catch visitors coming and going. I have many give aways and workshop sign-up options for my visitors. As I sit here listening to speakers and waiting on interested passersby, I think about the days I sat behind a desk charting in patient charts.  I would begin by documenting the orientation of my patient to person, place and time. In writing, I demonstrate the ordinary life, time and place of the main character of the story.  In nursing documentation you must chart the patient’s physical characteristics and head to toe account of health or injury. In writing, the author must offer an account of the physical characteristics unique to the character. The relationship between writing a book and nursing documentation are not so far removed that a likeness cannot be found.

All writing requires showing the reader an image through words. Nursing is very visual and requires the ability to recognize the normal from the unusual in a patient’s health and well-being. A nurse should be able to relay that information through accurate and detailed documentation so other healthcare providers can follow up on changes and recognize any unwanted patient illnesses. Writing a book requires no less detailed documentation of character description, scene, or setting.  The only real difference in writing for nursing versus a book would be that nursing documentation requires strict adherence to facts with little flourish of descriptive adjectives for artful flow.

Listening to the learned speakers of the conference as they wrap-up their monologues and people drift down the halls, I have the urge to document the swagger of each character into a journal. Creating a written image of the day, and of the people.

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