A Writers Group Tale: From Ashes to Success Through Trial and Error
…who show up to our meetings tend to be fun, warm-hearted, helpful, and engaged. From them we’ve built a core of people who come back week after week. But it…
…who show up to our meetings tend to be fun, warm-hearted, helpful, and engaged. From them we’ve built a core of people who come back week after week. But it…
…understanding how people read a blog versus a book can help keep more readers coming back. How to build your community on different platforms and across different media. Creative ways…
…romance. She regularly obsesses over board games, Doctor Who, and Harry Potter. Come share your ideas with her on Facebook and Twitter–@WritingRefinery–and on the web at www.writingrefinery.com …
…complete a novel. When she’s not immersed in fiction, she’s running in the fresh mountain air of Colorado or snuggling with her rescue dog, Chase. Find out more at www.thewriterremedy.com…
…When you’re disconnected from screens and work, try to stay completely present. Use your senses to explore the sights, sounds and smells around you. Focus completely on the person you’re…
The year is coming to a close, but we still have a few weeks left to assess where we are in 2015, and where we want to be in 2016….
…300 live segments and created the company’s Food Media Junket, bringing in James Beard award-winning and Michelin-Starred chefs for over a dozen food and lifestyle brands. These days, she helps…
…at the age of 48. In most careers, this would be considered too late to just be getting started. You might feel too old compared to your younger colleagues. However,…
…we each have full, complex lives, and that to dismiss our non-writing commitments would be just as disingenuous as if we turned our backs on our creative work. What Honoring…
…our entire lives. Yes, you try and you fail, but the key is to come back again and again. Failing better means you make a commitment to keep trying. The…