Online Writing Course

Finding Our Perspective: Writing Health and Care Stories

Online // 

14th December
2-4pm GMT

Writing about illness we experience, the care we give, or being disabled by society, can bring its own health benefits. This supportive workshop is a safe space to begin exploring, and if you feel comfortable, expressing your individual story. Based on gentle prompts to encourage new writing, this is a time to pause and find your unique perspective.

There are so many ways we can write about health, care and illness. For those of us with health and care needs, or who have been disabled by society, first we may need to give ourselves permission to tell our story. In a world where the medical language of diagnoses, prescriptions and prognoses can obscure our stories, and possibly even silence our perspective, this workshop is an opportunity to look at our story afresh.
 
What story are we even telling? Many of us have a complex story to tell, so how might we begin to express it, without overwhelming ourselves? How might we use words to describe, on our terms, what health, care and illness mean to us? 
 
An introduction to embodied writing, or writing what we feel is going on within our bodies (and in our minds, too), this Live Online workshop will pave the way for a course, Writing what’s within: our stories on health, care and illness, to follow in spring 2025. 
 
At this workshop, short reading samples will help us to think through points of view and styles we can choose to use when we write about health, care and illness. 
 
  • A two-hour live zoom workshop with writer and coach, Andrew Kaye Kauffmann, including a combination of reading, discussion and gentle writing exercises
  • Reading material provided outside of the Zoom session
  • Resources on telling your story within safe boundaries and with wellbeing in mind
  • Content rooted in the social model of disability, open to people with health and care needs, and those who provide care
Paced to be a comfortable writing experience, suited to writers of all levels. There will be a comfort break of 15 minutes in the middle. There is no expectation to be on camera, if you don’t feel comfortable appearing on camera.
 

Learning online

This Live Online workshop will take place on Zoom, so you will need to have access to the internet. The course tutor will share the Zoom link for the workshop via email the evening before the event.
 

This workshop will be recorded for the purpose of sending to ticket holders who can’t make the event, or who miss a portion of the event, or who need the recording as part of their access needs.

If you do not receive an invitation link, or if you have any other questions, please contact us at ennis@londonlitlab.co.uk.

Course dates

14th December
2-4pm GMT

Course location

This is an online course

Cost

£20

Half-price place

There will be two half-price places and two free places available on a first come first served basis. Please email ennis@londonlitlab.co.uk to let us know if you would like one of these spots.

Further Info

The workshop will run with a minimum of 15 participants and a maximum of 100.  Any questions at all, please drop us a line at ennis@londonlitlab.co.uk and we’ll be happy to help!

About the tutor

Andrew Kaye Kauffmann is a coach, a writer and a tutor of creative writing. The Centre for Mental Health’s 2023-24 Writer in Residence, he has lived with a mental health condition for over 20 years. In the past, a campaigner for health and care charities such as Age UK, Macmillan Cancer Support and Royal National Institute of Blind People, today he writes on topics such as mental health, being a kidney donor, and being a carer. He has completed a CPD-accredited introduction to Therapeutic and Reflective Writing with The Professional Writing Academy, and recently completed training with the Institute for Narrative Therapy. A coach who focuses on stories as a tool to support individuals undergoing life transitions, he’s facilitated workshops on writing for brainstrust and Carers UK. Elsewhere, he’s led workshops on writing challenging material for The Literary Consultancy, Out on the Page and The Write Salon. A freelance journalist who has been published by HuffPost UK, Andrew is looking forward to beginning his MA in Creative Writing and Wellbeing at Teesside University. Here is his LinkedIn and Website.

Finding Our Perspective: Writing Health and Care Stories