Online Writing Course

Lay Bare Our Experience

Online // 

1st April 2026
2-4.15pm (UK Time)

There are so many ways we can write about health, care and illness. First, though, we have to choose our perspective. Whose story are we even telling? Are there other people implicated in our story, such as family, carers or health professionals?

What choices might we face in laying bare our experience? And how might we write within safe boundaries as we do so? If you are a carer or a health or care professional, are there ethical considerations in telling somebody else’s story? This workshop will consider what those might be.

For returning participants, there will be an added focus this time on the societal stories we hear about health and illness and where, if at all, our story currently “fits in”. We will briefly consider how our storytelling can work as a corrective to political misinformation or media misunderstanding about ill health or being disabled.

Reading samples will help us to think through contemporary conversations on illness and which perspectives are given primacy. We will draw on writing texts which seek to challenge mainstream narratives. 

An optional forum in which you can participate will enable you to reflect on what it means to share your story, and how you might do this in the months ahead. (This will be for a further half hour at the workshop’s end).

Course Outline

Session three of a series of live zoom workshops with tutor of expressive and therapeutic writing, and coach, Andrew Kauffmann. Including a combination of reading, discussion and writing exercises.

  • Reading material provided outside of the Zoom session

  • Resources on telling your story within safe boundaries and the benefits to expressive writing on health and care experiences

  • An optional forum to participate in at the end of the third workshop to reflect on the experience of exploring and expressing your health and care story: a supportive forum where you can feel witnessed and, if you wish, you can share something of your story

  • Content rooted in the social model of disability, open to all 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 short comfort break. There is no expectation to be on camera, if you don’t feel comfortable appearing on camera. Neither will there be any expectations around sharing what you’ve written with other participants. For returning participants, there will be an added focus in this coming series on writing in a range of experimental forms, mixing genres and without constraints or concern for convention on how we might write our story.

Series of Workshops

You can purchase an individual £25 ticket for each live workshop, or a combination £70 ticket which includes all three workshops at a £5 discount. These sessions are designed to work as a series, with a successive series of writing exercises to engage with to help develop your story.

Combination Ticket: Writing Our Health and Care Stories | £70 | All Three Workshops (Listed Below)

Workshop 1: Writing What´s Within | £25 | Wednesday 18th February 2026 | 2–3.30pm, UK Time (GMT / UTC+0)

Workshop 2: Health and Illness as Metaphors | £25 | Wednesday 11th March 2026 | 2–3.30pm, UK Time (GMT / UTC+0)

Workshop 3: Lay Bare Our Experience | £25 | Wednesday 1st April 2026 | 2–4.15pm, UK Time (BST / UTC+1)

Session three includes an optional further half hour of reflective discussion on how your story might be written or told between 3.45pm and 4.15pm.

Learning Online

These events will be recorded for the purpose of sending to ticket holders who can’t make an event, and those who require the recording to meet their access needs. If you purchase this ticket when a session has already taken place, you will be sent the recording. All recordings will be available to watch until the 14th April 2026, two weeks after the final workshop.

These workshops will take place on Zoom, so you will need to have access to the internet at the times given above. We will share Zoom links for each session via email the day before. You can also access the Zoom link via your Ticket Tailor booking.

Course dates

1st April 2026
2-4.15pm (UK Time)

Course location

This is an online course

Cost

£25.00

Half-price place

A discount of £5 has been included to the combination ticket of all three events. If you would like to purchase tickets for these events individually, each event has four half price places and two free place 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. Please note, you can only have one discounted place across all three events.

Further Info

These workshops will run with a minimum of 20 and a maximum of 40 participants. Any questions at all, please drop us a line at info@londonlitlab.co.uk and we’ll be happy to help!

About the tutor

Andrew Kauffmann is a coach and a tutor of expressive and therapeutic writing. The Centre for Mental Health’s 2024 Writer in Residence, he has lived with a mental health condition for over 20 years. A kidney donor, and a campaigner with extensive experience working for health and care charities such as Age UK, Macmillan Cancer Support and Royal National Institute of Blind People, he has recently run writing workshops for members of Carers UK, Renal Arts Group and Kidney Care UK. He delivers writing for wellbeing workshops for members of brainstrust, a UK based brain tumour charity. Elsewhere, he’s led workshops on writing challenging material for The Literary Consultancy and The Write Salon. He has completed a CPD-accredited introduction to Therapeutic and Reflective Writing with The Professional Writing Academy, and undergone training with the Institute for Narrative Therapy on turning life events into stories. A coach who focuses on stories as a tool to support individuals undergoing life transitions, Andrew is undertaking an MA in Creative Writing and Wellbeing at Teesside University. Here is his LinkedIn and Website

Andrew has worked with individuals with a wide range of health and care experiences. The workshops place a priority on respecting every single experience and providing space for every experience to be listened to.

Lay Bare Our Experience