Friday, June 17, 2022

Reading, Writing and Retirement

     I’m pleased to announce that, after working as a certified medical assistant for 34 years, I am retired. Sort of. Because the clinic where I’ve worked for the last 22 years is so short-handed (thank you, covid-19), I agreed to fill in a few times a month. Right now that stands at four days in June, two in July, and three in August. We’ll see how that all goes and if I continue to offer my time.

This has been coming since November when I found out that the doctor I’d been working with was leaving his position for something new. I cut back to 24 hours a week the first of March, which was a nice transition.

I’ve got a long list of things to do with all this time on my hands. Everyone is like, “you’ll be so bored, you’ll run out of things to do”. Obviously, they’ve not seen my list.

The number one thing I’ve been wanting to do is to get back at writing.

In 2018, I had a dream (a real dream like you have when you’re sleeping, not when you’re someone like Martin Luther King, Jr.), which inspired me to start my next novel. I got up to chapter 13 when recent news events gave me an idea for another storyline.

I started writing that novel in August of 2020 and four months later came to a standstill. Covid was haunting us all and working in the medical field had become oppressive. I just wanted to spend all my free time reading or binge-watching whatever TV series my husband was into.

Then last November I saw the light at the end of the tunnel. I spent six months thinking about opening that file on my laptop and tapping out a new adventure for my protagonists – Ellen, Emma, and Tara.

On June 9, I finally made my commitment – one hour of writing five days a week. I found that if I take my laptop out to our camping trailer, there are fewer distractions. Since starting that routine, I’ve written 3,221 words. Nothing record-breaking, but it’s a start.

If anyone is interested in reading the first twenty-two, unedited chapters, I’d be happy to email it to you. Just let me know.

In the meantime, it’s been two years since I released my last novel, “The Truth Beyond the River”. It’s still available on Amazon, as a paperback or e-book. If you’ve read it already and haven’t had a chance to write a review of it, it’s not too late for that either.

All of us struggling writers need whatever encouragement we can get to keep plucking away on the keyboard. 

Thanks for all of your support. Chris 



3 comments:

  1. You go girl! Miss you!!

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  2. Good job on finding a routine that works for you. Good luck with sticking to it

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  3. Yay for being retired! If anything else, it must be a relief not to have to juggle so much in life. And in the end, I think still working a little is a better transition. After all, we hear so many stories of people having a hard time when they retire because it's so much change at once. So this might just be a blessing in disguise. :D
    Also, I'd be happy to take a look at your chapters if you're not in a rush. Feel free to email me if you're still looking.

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