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Buffett Book Launch

Warren Buffett-Bill uffet

Bill Buffett and cousin, Warren Buffett, at a signing for a book I edited, Foods You Will Enjoy: the Story of Buffett's Store.

Carol, Bill Buffett

Warren contributed a chapter of the book and helped Bill (above, wih me) plug it at his Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting in Omaha. Both Warren and Bill worked at the legendary family grocery.

 



Loire Valley, France

In June, 12 of us had a wonderful week of writing and sketching at LePin, a chateau alive with history and full of great places to write.

Lepin

We're hoping this visual writing residency will be the first of many.



Doha women writing students

teaching in Qatar

I had a fascinating six-weekresidency in Qatar, where I taught writing to a group of Qatar University students and to the QU library staff. I also taught a day-long writing workshop to a group of ex-pats, living in Qatar. For news about the programs click here and here.

And for more informal details, and pictures from my stay there, visit my blog.

 



gulf times

My Doha Students' First Reading Made the Regional News

Our program was recently featured, in the (Doha) Gulf News.To read it,

Click Here.

 

For more pictures and impressions of my experiences, visit ...

<Carol's Blog>.

 

A Weekend of Workshops

Hospital

October 26 - 28, Shelby. NC

I was invited to present a series of writing workshops for medical and pastoral professionals, in addition to thelay population. The weekend was sponsored by the Cleveland County NC Healthcare System's Center for Lifelong Learning. Other sponsors included local churches, health care centers, and civic groups.

 

carol in pulpit

Billed as "Finding Hope through Reflection & Writing, a Weekend with Carol Henderson."

On October 13, I was proud to speak at the

3rd Annual Heartstrings Walk to Remember,

in Greensboro, NC, sponsored and produced by the Heartstrings Infant Loss Support Group.

Heartstrings Walk to Remember


 

Carol's Blog

Carol's Blog

What I'm up to now...
with pictures.



New...

Carol's Picks

Carol's Picks

Click here for Carol's Picks,some of my favorite books about writing, along with some memoirs and essay collections I really like. Soon I'll be adding poetry collections and more books about writing. It's my new "store," so feel free to click and buy.

 



Coming Up...

Fall 2008

Workshops now posted.

For schedule, click here



In the Works

Lepin-livingroom

In the coming summer (2009) we hope to return to LePin for another "week of writing and sketching -- a visual writing residency. Plan to join us.

Farther into the future...a possible workshop in Scotland. Stay tuned.


 

Special workshop "Journaling into a Larger Life," a mini course, 4 Tuesdays, starting in July. ArtsCenter of Chapel Hill-Carrboro.

Click here.



Fall 2008 Workshops
the new s chedule will be posted in June.
For more information...

Click here



Sign up for my Email Newsletter...
to be double sure you get the word on workshop schedules, special events, and other announcements.

Click here.



Testimonials

"I have just returned from an incredible week in the South of France with Carol Henderson at the helm of a writers’ workshop. I can’t say enough about it. The accommodations, companionship, scenery, outings, adventures and food, were only outdone by the time spent with Carol discov-ering hidden voices. Writing is no longer a labor, not always inspired, but always a joy. Thank you so much Carol, it was a life changing event for me. I can’t wait to attend the next one."
--Sandra Elliot, Chapel Hill, NC

"My time spent at Carol's writing work-shop in Provence was
a life-changing event. I will always remember it with great joy as one of the best weeks of my life!
"
--Kit Stewart, entrepreneur and author, Pittsboro, NC

"In Provence, with Carol and our workshop, I found the peace and content-ment with which to explore my thoughts, as well as the encouragement and support to write and share them. It was also an enor-mously fun time."
–Liza Collins, playwright and screenwriter, Providence, RI

"Carol Henderson's workshop was exactly what I needed to jumpstart my writing... it was a productive and fun week."–Stephanie Silberstein, Writer, Fayetteville, NC

"My goal for the writing residency was to be motivated to get back to my writing of a memoir that deals with my journey from mourning to joy. You provided that motivation and inspiration for doing just that... Thank you for the integrity and vulnerability with which you facilitated our work together."
–Wilson Brent, pastor (ret.) Cary, NC

 

(from Losing Malcolm by Carol Henderson)

 

"Post-Op"


Malcolm had passed his second full night “post-op.” He
opened his lids and looked at us, with his bright eyes, as if
he fully expected us to be right there and was saying, "Hey,
I'm back."

 

Our son looked positively pink, for the first time since his
birth. Some minor bleeding into one of his lungs had stopped
as mysteriously as it had started. The nurses were weaning him off the respirator. One hung a black-and-white mobile above his head and he stared at it, vigorously kicking his legs.
They were beefy legs now, and his once-bony toes and fingers
were pudgy. You might almost have been tempted to call him
chubby! He was working hard to heal, the nurses told us.

Working hard. I looked down at my small son.

 

In his short life of five weeks, Malcolm had become, in my eyes at least, a hero. I couldn't help but assign grown-up attributes to him—qualities like bravery, self-possession, and wisdom. He was only a baby, but he had endured more pain and trauma than many adults ever do—and he had survived with an uncanny, almost eerie stoicism.

I caught myself singing in the elevator on my way up to
Malcolm's floor. Bill and I felt so lucky. Malcolm was
thriving. We had incredible support from our friends and
families. My parents were keeping everybody updated on
Malcolm's progress—as well as looking out for Molly. They had
even taken her to the vet to be spayed. In about a week, we
would get back to Wakefield. Malcolm and Molly would finally
meet, and the four of us would be able to take family walks.

The elevator doors slid open.

 

Suddenly, walking toward Malcolm's unit, I heard the dreaded shrill alarm, signaling that a child was in a life-threatening state. It was a call to doctors to drop everything and come, as well as a warning to parents to get the hell out of there, fast. Emergency chest-openings could be done on the spot, in each small unit, but were closed to the public—and that included parents.

 

The heavy metal doors slammed shut in my face just as I
arrived. I had no way of knowing if Malcolm was the baby in
trouble. Parents who had been inside clustered around the
doors. Lydia's mom, one of my new acquaintances, rushed over to me.

"At least I know it's not Lydia," she said. "I was sitting
beside her when the alarm sounded, and she was sleeping
peacefully."

"It could be Malcolm," I said. "I just got here." I cursed
myself for having left briefly to try to sleep.

"Oh dear," Lydia's mom said. "Let's sit down." She led me
to a bench and sat beside me. Lydia's mom was Filipino, her husband American. Lydia was their teenage daughter, with beautiful Eurasian looks and a hole in her heart.

As a child, Lydia had undergone two successful cardiac
procedures. She had one final surgery left and her parents,
noticing that she was pale and tiring easily, had suggested
she go ahead and have it. Lydia refused. Her parents insisted,
wanting her to be in top form by the time she left for
college, in less than a year.

 

It was a routine procedure, if you can ever call open-heart
surgery routine. The operation went smoothly. But a few days
later, as her mother described it, "Lydia's system went
berserk." Her body ballooned with fluids; her beautifully
sculpted face became round and bumpy. She broke out in a
fierce systemic rash and suffered two major seizures. Having
trouble breathing, she was back on the respirator.

 

"Her blood simply didn't want to be rerouted in this new way,"
Lydia's mom had told me. That was her own personal analysis,
and it was as good as anything the doctors could come up with.


Lydia's case baffled everyone.

 

And Lydia, fully conscious and almost an adult, was furious
with her parents for having insisted on the surgery.

 

"We just wanted to operate before she got too weak or sick,"
Lydia's mom had said. "And now I feel terrible."

 

"You did the right thing," I told her, clutching her hand.


"What else could you have done? She was failing."

 

One of the huge doors opened and Cheryl, Malcolm's new
day nurse, came out. Cheryl was particularly fond of Malcolm.
She’d told Bill that she had a dream about him. "He's so
handsome," she said. She had nicknamed him "Hollywood
Henderson" on account of his star quality and the breakthrough surgery. Now she was headed in my direction, her curly brown hair (that Malcolm loved to reach for), bobbing gently as she walked. I felt the blood draining from my face. Lydia's mom squeezed my hand.

"It's not Malcolm," Cheryl said. "I knew you hadn't been
inside and I wanted to let you know."

I exhaled deeply. Lydia's mom wrapped her arm around my
shoulder.

Cheryl walked over to a couple who had just arrived the night
before. Their new-born daughter had been operated on in the
middle of the night. Now they were both leaning against the
wall by the elevators.

The rest of us looked down, not wanting to seem intrusive.
Cheryl said something we couldn’t hear and the mother slumped against her husband. Cheryl helped the man hold his wife up. She said something else and he shook his head vehemently and said, "No." His voice was loud and angry. He pressed the elevator button again and again. The doors opened and the two of them got on, the woman sobbing and pounding on the man's chest. The shiny elevator doors closed.

No one moved or spoke. We all knew it could have been one of
us.

 

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