{by guest blogger Cathy Miller}
I cherished my sister’s Nancy Drew books.
Like so many things in a family of seven children, the books I loved were hand-me-downs. Okay, to be honest, they were never mine. But, I read them from cover to cover and back again.
I think it was then I realized I wanted to write. To say there were a few twists in my journey is putting it mildly.
I am the middle child of those seven, and the first born under insurance.
Little did I know that sealed my fate. I like to say I was doomed from the womb to be in insurance. And that’s what I did – for over 30 years.
Don’t get me wrong. There is nothing wrong with being in insurance. I made a very good living at it and it helped finance my new business.
I have two sides – a practical side and a creative side. I like to blame that on my parents. Hey, don’t we blame everything on them? My Dad was the hard-working, support-your-family type of man. My Mom is more of the dreamer, anything’s possible person.
My practical side took over at an early age.
For the next thirty-four years, I worked for insurance companies, then major consulting and brokerage firms. You name it, I did it – claims, customer service, provider relations, account management, consulting.
But, I had an itch that I barely scratched.
I have been writing as long as I can remember – even in the insurance/employee benefits industry.
When I worked for insurance companies, I wrote:
When I moved into consulting and brokerage work, I wrote reports and eventually moved into managing communications for sales and client services.
While my creative side snuck into my practical side’s world, I wanted more.
We all have dreams. Mine was to write – whenever and wherever I could. My practical side allowed the creative side in, but largely silenced the dream.
Like any good writer with a flair for drama, my exit from Corporate America involved hitting my breaking point and quitting on the spot. Fortunately, my practical side (and a very understanding boss) had me apologizing for the emotions, but not the outcome.
We worked out a transition until I was officially a freelance business writer – with my former employer as my first client.
So, here I am in a marriage of the practical and creative. Of course, that cannot be the end of the journey. Surprise, surprise, I dream of writing fiction. My freelance business writing is helping me move down that path. Hopefully, it won’t take another 30 years to achieve it.
Regrets? Not really. My mantra is everything happens for a reason. I would not be the person – or the writer – I am without my life’s experiences. I close my personal blog posts with a favorite expression:
It’s all about the journey.
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Cathy Miller is a freelance business writer with over 30 years of professional writing experience from small businesses to Fortune 500 customers. Cathy started her own business in 2008, providing all forms of online and print business writing. Cathy has a business writing blog at Simply stated business, a health care blog at Simply stated health care and her personal bog, millercathy: A Baby Boomer’s Second Life.