A Woman’s Journal: Personal and Professional
by
Book Details
About the Book
Worldviews encompass the usual to the unusual. Human personal and professional accounts divulge life’s happenings. Throughout A Woman’s Journal, there is a depiction of true life events. These propose key incidents, which direct clear understanding of what is, what should be, what could be, what happens, or what happened. The clear understanding of human emotions comes through. And the socio-adapted variations determine human decision-making outcome. The “what is” depicts actual life-giving propositions. The “what should be” presents analytical follow-through with the forthcoming “what could be.” The “what could be” is determined within comparative analysis for founded intellectual decisions. The “what happens” draws attention to human interaction and is basis for developing finishes to development completions. Actions from and throughout scene to scene depict the conceptualization of a true life (sad but true). From the beginning—formation of character and adherence to values through to the midpoint for the surface to the in-depth reality of the dos and don’ts—to finalization. And the “what happens” is formulated and encapsulated in truth—the philosophical “what is truth.” How truth is perceived and interpreted is the situational reality. A Woman’s Journal, through a year’s period of writings, photographs, daily solitude, person-to-person exchanges, permissive to nonpermissive enactments, business climatic actions, societal diversions—the woman’s true self within a true life.
About the Author
Dr Constance Colon-Jones is a professional communications specialist. She has corporate world and academic world communication experiences. Author Colon-Jones has been invited over the years to personally and professionally field address varying and integrated communication issues. Her communication awards have been documented and published.