One week ago I wrote about suddenly feeling motivated to finish my book. I have been working on it loads, and while I still feel like I am dragging my feet (maybe I am just too impatient), I am nearly there! Met with a friend who also happens to be a writer and a healer last week. She gave me constructive feedback and I have been applying her comments as well as going over the structure of the book.
One of the things she suggested was that I build more of a narrative around my introduction. The opening pages are where I speak of my own family's experiences with illness, it helps to talk about a dilemma by giving it a personal spin first. This is a lesson that I learned, oddly enough, by listening to a Shakira song in the 1990's. It is my favorite, called Inevitable, and at one point Shakira says something about leading with your own feelings when having a difficult conversation.
The song is in the context of a break-up - but it made me think about my book on energy healing & cancer. The question: how to approach a difficult topic, one that could be painful. If we are introducing a topic that some may not be able to assimilate head on, phrasing it in terms of your own feelings and experience takes the focus off the other person and gets the dialogue going. It is easier for people to relate to personable stories. The question for me is how much do I share?
Some of the experiences that I am sharing also touched others. Family mostly. Not everyone is comfortable with an open approach. This week I have been refining the personal side and thinking about how to phrase it. Some aspects need to be described in a politically correct way. The wording I have now still has to be scaled back to accomodate for sensibilities. I suppose this is the case in any narrative that touches on real events. How much of it is just my story to tell? Not a lot.
Inevitable by Shakira
Update: The personal story was published in 2013. Learn more about A Personal Guide to Self-Healing, Cancer & Love here.
Reiki hugs,
Regina
3 comments:
As long as you are clear and make it clear that what you telling is and was your point of view and does not mean it was the reality, you owning it as yours. Making sure people understand what that means. We will never have everyone's view or understanding of the experience and we can not please everyone. The point here is this is our book, our story, your pint of view and your feelings. People need to respect that. Make sure to make it clear this is not about blaming or point at anyone. This is simply your experience. :) xxx
You are a very clever individual!
Keep on working, great job!
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