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Guest

Prayers

April 5, 2017 By Guest

A Prayer

I wrote this prayer
To remind us of our responsibility
as Humans.
The important roles we play
as professionals and parents.
The role we play impacts our future generations
and thus the progression of the Human race.

Frequent reminders of the purpose
of our job helps us focus on the purpose.
Thus all self-created daily stresses become trivial.

—Your Obstetrician

 

Your Obstetrician’s Prayer

Thank you for giving me the opportunity to be a part of your life’s special moment.
I thank God for giving me the direction and purpose to do what I do.

My purpose is to facilitate the safe entry of a new life into the life cycle.
And help make special life time memories for many families.

God please provide an environment for this baby
so that we give him or her a chance to grow to full potential.

Please bless the parents, family, friends, professionals, teachers and society
to positively contribute to his or her complete growth.

physical, mental, emotional, intellectual and spiritual,
so this child is nurtured in abundant unconditional love and support.

Let this child grow into a loving, giving, fair human being,
contributing to society in his or her own capacity.

Together, may all these babies grow up and collectively
make our world a beautiful safe place for future generations to come.

❤️ SR

Sudha Reddy

Sudha Reddy is board certified in obstetrics and gynecology. She is a life-long seeker and learner whose parents taught her true happiness is in helping and sharing. Her life purpose is to decrease suffering in the world, in every possible way. Writing is one of her many activities for staying healthy. Sudha is a new member of WOK.

Unbalanced Awareness

April 4, 2017 By Guest

Won’t you shake me free of these moldings
Vibrate me into feeling
Something more
Than beaten down and torn
Let the moon pull loose
These entwined roots of regret
As darkness gives way to dawn
Let the wind carry me on

—Terry McGhee

Terry McGhee

Terry McGhee was born and raised in Bakersfield, CA. He began pecking at an old typewriter in 1992 at the age of thirteen and quickly found that words had a way of releasing emotions that otherwise would never have seen the light of day. Currently working with Bakersfield’s own indie film company Hectic Films Productions, he now splits his time between movies, madness, prose, and poetry.

Because I Am a Poet

April 2, 2017 By Guest

I realize it’s quite late – most people are in bed.
The quiet time is best for me to write what’s in my head
(what’s truly in my heart).

So during the night I start.
I want to put it all down
on paper, black on white.
It’s crucial that I find the right
adjective for each noun,
the accurate definition,
the proper words that rhyme.
If I could quit my full-time job,
I’d write poetry all the time.

I began to write as a youngster – it was cosmic destiny!
My Mom named me after the British poet Percy Bysshe Shelley.
All to God I owe it
because I am a poet.
Mom asked me if I know it;
she said that my feet show it –
they’re long fellows!

(The crowd bellows.)
But I don’t really care,
I will write anyway.
For my own aspiration
I write ‘most every day.

(So there!)
I don’t need congratulations
to affirm my imaginations.
Life’s full of inspirations
for poetic revelations –
they’re everywhere!

—Shelley Evans

Shelley Evans started writing poetry when she was a young girl, and several of her poems have been published. She is working on her dream to publish a book of poetry. Shelley is also a legal secretary, wife, and mother of three daughters. She is an active member of WOK.

 

On the Road Home

April 1, 2017 By Guest

A thin wisp of disturbed dust follows
a pickup climbing slowly up a mountain.
The driver heads north along a sandy side road,
bordering Barstow, California.

There is no clear destination, no place we see
that he can call home that we can visualize

We have just come from family and friends
in Las Vegas.  Visitors’ remorse haunts
We still hear familiar voices, laughter,
feel the tight hugs imploring us to stay.

If only the truck could reverse itself
and not disturb the pure brown earth,
could come back down the hill
and put back all of the tiny origins of life

which floated away, changed, left their
sanctity and took up new space.
If only we could go back to the place
home once was and begin again.

—Nancy Edwards

Nancy Edwards

Nancy Edwards, long-time Writers of Kern member, passed away January 5, 2017. She co-sponsored Bakersfield’s National Poetry Month celebrations, coordinated poetry events, and co-hosted readings and performances. She presented writing programs and workshops for Writers of Kern, 60-Plus Club of CSUB, and many others. Nancy was a gifted and prolific writer of fiction and non-fiction as well as poetry.

11 Publication Opportunities for Emerging Writers

January 12, 2016 By Guest

Admit it. The writer life can be a daunting one. We work hard to master story mechanics, sweat over voice and style, and struggle to determine just which writing rules to follow and which to break. After all that, finding a place to actually send our work for publication can feel like an afterthought.

Or worse, sometimes when we don’t know where to send our work, the writing can feel less worth it somehow.

Sure, we’re supposed to love the writing for its own sake. But that doesn’t mean we haven’t all been there anyway.

So here are eleven resources overflowing with publication opportunities for emerging writers. Use this list as the carrot stick that keeps you writing through your most recent work in progress, then find the perfect place from this list to finally hit submit.

Where to Find Publications That Accept Work from New and Unpublished Writers

The Review Review Magazine Database: offers a slew of literary and commercial publications that accept work from new writers. Here you can search publications by format (online or print), response time, and pay range.

The Review Review Classifieds: from the same publication that created the magazine search above, these classifieds save you the search time by listing calls for submissions for publications that are looking for work right now.

Chicken Soup for The Soul: publishes inspirational, true stories from “ordinary people having extraordinary experiences.” What’s great about this publication is the sheer number of titles they publish each year. That’s a lot of opportunities for new writers to get published. Be sure to check out their guidelines first for story themes and what they’re looking for.

Funds for Writers Newsletter: this email newsletter is particularly helpful for writers looking for fellowships, grants, and publication opportunities. With 35,000 subscribers, Funds for Writers must be doing something right.

Paying Flash Fiction Publications: these five paying publications listed on my site are looking for flash fiction only. Flash fiction stories range from 100-2000+ words, which means a great opportunity to get something under submission quickly. Resource lists payment rates, word counts, and deadlines for each publication.

LitReactor’s Publications by Genre: this resource covers more than just genre specific publications like Fantasy, Horror, Scifi, Literary, Mystery, and more. It also lists each publication’s professional ranking and how difficult it is to break in. Most of the publications listed here pride themselves on publishing work from unpublished writers.

Paying Freelance Publications: if you’re looking to publish articles instead of fiction, these 75 publications—listed on The Work at Home Woman—are looking for you. You’ll find a home for everything from blog posts to greeting cards, short stories, recipes, and travel writing.

Local Online and Print Magazines: don’t forget the publications in your own backyard. You’re more likely to know what’s important to the readers in your community when you live there too. If you’re from Bakersfield, these four publications will bring you up to eleven places to submit your writing: Bakersfield Californian letters to the editor, Bakersfield Life, Bakersfield Magazine, and Kern Business Journal. Pro tip: send a quick note through each site’s contact page to ask where to send your pitch ideas.

4 Simple Steps to Your First Publication

If you want to get published, you’ve got to submit your work. There’s no way around it, writer. So apply this easy strategy to ensure your publication success this year.

  1. Take a few minutes to pull all your finished writing, works in progress, story ideas, and articles you’d like to write into one place.
  2. Using the resources listed here, select 5-10 publications that match each one of your works or ideas. Keep this list of potential publications where you’ll see it every day.
  3. Send your work to the first publication on your list right now.
  4. When and if that first publication rejects the work (rejection happens and it’s okay!), send it immediately to the next publication on your list.

Apply this strategy to each of your works, and you’ll be way ahead of most writers. And with this recipe, you won’t be unpublished for long. Good luck!

Did I miss anything? Share it in the comments.


Mandy Wallace, writer & bloggerMandy Wallace is a writing coach and blogger with a bachelor’s in English Lit and a few academic writing awards under her belt. She shares weekly writing tips and interviews with publishing experts on her website for new writers, which clocked over a half million page views last year. Get her weekly writing tips here.


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