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 From Personal to Professional Writing  
A good writer can place the reader at a scene and paint incredible pictures with their words that allow people to experience it. Keeping a record of personal events can make it much easier to recreate the moments when it is time to record them.

By Ward Tipton

Many great writers got their start by keeping personal diaries or journals. No matter what you call them, they are a very valid contribution to your skills and ability as a writer. What many people fail to understand is the full range of benefits involved with keeping such personal observations regarding simple matters of their life. While the author may disregard these events as casual or par for their life, at some point in time, they may very well provide the backbone for the next great novel or in some instances, the next top-selling autobiography.

Writers, by their very nature, are involved with many different aspects of the world around them. A good writer can place the reader at the scene and paint incredible pictures with their words that allow the people to experience the scene almost as if they were right there when it happened. Keeping a daily record of those events can make it much easier to recreate the moments when it is time to record them for posterity.

Imagine the literary loss to the world had Thoreau never taken notes about his observations. Would you consider a walk through the woods to be anything worthy of historical retrospection? Whether you do or not, there may be small key points that relate to the world in a way you could not even have imagined at the time that are only brought to light under the reflection of lessons learned long after the original moment passed. Those moments would be forever lost to history had someone not taken the time to record their simple, mundane, or seemingly boring thoughts for a look back later in time.

Imagine the fate of the literary world had Hemingway retreated even further into himself and never made any effort at all to communicate his view of the world. Where would we be without his classics, teaching us about the constant struggle within each one of us? The ability he had to express the desire to go on living despite the futility of life around us, the strike of fate which hits us all so deeply on so many levels, was an incredible gift - and one that should rightfully be shared with the world.

No matter how insignificant the events of a day may seem at its passing, it could contain minute details that would only be visible at a later point in time. Recording the major occurrences of a day will often help the reader to put together all of the little things that happened as well. Those small details often add up to a moment of greatness that can be shared and enjoyed by others as well.

While you may or may not be the writer who creates the next best-seller or wins the next Pulitzer, you could still make valuable contributions to the world. Are you ready to deny the world the benefits of what you have to offer? Keeping something as simple as a daily journal or diary may seem almost like an exercise in futility to you at the moment, but it could in fact, provide the key that opens up the next great adventure, either for you personally or for the world as a whole.

To paraphrase an old saying; 'Thar's gold in them thar words!' Make sure that you write them down and give the world a chance to shine some light on them.

About the Author:

Ward Tipton has been an author and editor for over twenty years. He has specialized the last three years in writing for some of the most prominent Internet marketers around the world. He is now breaking out on his own and slowly but surely breaking into the world of Internet marketing from a unique perspective and with a unique style and flair all his own. Article Source: 1st Rate Articles - http://1stRateArticles.com


  Article added 02/18/08.

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