Monday, 25 July 2016

Thomas Heric - The Qualities A Medical Professional Must Possess

Thomas Heric is a retired neurologist who worked for many years as a doctor, providing care to patients through his own private practice. This also gave him the opportunity to work with many other medical professionals from a range of specializations during his career. The following are all common qualities that you tend to find in anybody who works in medicine.



Strong Communication Skills

Medical professionals must be strong communicators who are capable of talking to people on a variety of levels. Not only must they be able to communicate with fellow professionals, often while using medical terminology, but they must also be able to simplify complex issues so that they can speak to patients and help them to understand their conditions and what is being done to help them.

A Thirst For Knowledge

The medical profession is constantly evolving, with new discoveries and research being published in practically every field of medicine almost daily. As such, those who wish to provide the best possible care to their patients must stay abreast of the latest developments in their fields, else they will find that their knowledge bases start to fall behind and they offer poorer care.

Logical Thinking

Thomas Heric understands that hospitals and other medical facilities can often be very emotional places, especially when scared patients and relatives are taken into account. As such, medical professionals need to be able to think logically in all situations, keeping their heads clear of emotion so that they can decide on the best courses of action.

Tuesday, 19 July 2016

Thomas Heric - Tips For Improving As A Writer

Having spent the majority of his career as a neurologist, Thomas Heric encountered a number of interesting challenges when he started to write books. While he had experience in contributing to scientific papers, the process of writing content that could keep more general audiences engaged excited him and led to him developing and improving as a writer. The following tips should prove useful to anybody who wants to do the same.

Thomas Heric


Write Constantly

Many new writers make the mistake of thinking that they only need to write when inspiration strikes them, especially when they are writing works of fiction. However, this can serve to dull their skills and results in no actual work being done. Instead, try to write something every day, even if you think it is of low quality. It can always be edited at a later date.

Treat It Like A Job

Writing can become a chore, especially when you are trying to redraft your work to make improvements. When this happens, you need to get into the mindset that writing is like a job. This will motivate you to keep going and to make the improvements that make it more likely that our work will be published.

Analyze Good Writers

Thomas Heric has published a number of works over the years and notes that fellow writers can often be rich sources of inspiration. Read constantly and pay special attention to works and passages that engage you. Analyze them and try to figure out what it is that made them so appealing, so you can apply the same thought processes to your own writing.

Sunday, 10 July 2016

Thomas Heric - The Early History of Vaudeville

Thomas Heric is a neurologist and author who also has an interest in theatre, particularly vaudeville. Unlike many other genres of theatre, vaudeville focuses on variety within the performance, often through the grouping of a number, often unrelated, acts. It became particularly popular in the United States in the late 19th century, enjoying a slow evolution in the process.

Early History

Vaudeville as a genre of theatre first began making an appearance in the early 1860s, when concert saloon and variety hall owners would enlist groups of performers, each of whom usually specialized in different types of acts, to entertain their patrons. It is unknown when the vaudeville moniker was first attached to such ensemble shows, however, they soon started to gain popularity. It is interesting to note that variety theatre already existed in a number of forms throughout Europe and elsewhere long before vaudeville, but it was the US-variant of the genre that established many of the common tropes of the genre that we know today.

Thomas Heric

Polite Vaudeville

Up until the 1880s, vaudeville was usually performed by travelling troupes of performers, much like you may find with a circus act. In fact, it was a former circus ringmaster named Tony Pastor who lead the charge into middle-class society when he established “polite” vaudeville, which was performed in a number of New York theatres for more affluent audiences. Thomas Heric notes that this is when the modern interpretation of vaudeville took form, with the “birth” of vaudeville as a true genre often being considered to be October 24th, 1881, when Pastor stage a show at New York’s Fourteenth Street Theater.