Updated 2025
|| Sacred Sentences ||
Dear Kim,
I read your message many times. Again and again. Each time I feel something deep⦠I donāt know the word in English. Maybe comfort⦠or maybe like someone hold my hand and say, āYou can do it.ā
I have many questions inside me. Some I donāt even know how to ask in English. When I saw the incident report with 263 words, I feel confused. (CELBAN Writing ~ Incident Report. Can you spot the errors?) I wonderādid I write too little in my practice? Or maybe too much?
I want to do good. I want to write the way nurses do in Canada. Clear. Proper. But sometimes I feel stuck. Sometimes I write and I read again and think, āNo⦠this is wrong.ā I fix, then I break something else. I practice and practice⦠still not sure.
But your words remind me… it’s not only the number of words. Itās how we say them. How we organize. How we explain. And this… this I want to learn deeply.
Grammar⦠yes. I still struggle with articles, with punctuation. Sometimes I use comma where I need period. Sometimes I forget simple words. It make me feel small. But now I understand⦠this is not mistake. This is growth. I learning.
Thank you for showing us the way. Thank you for not just giving answer but giving encouragement. Your books, your stories⦠they give me hope. Real hope. I feel Iām not alone anymore.
May God bless you more and more. For your kindness. For your patience. For believing in us when we still learning to believe in ourselves.
With heart full of gratitude,
C.
Dear C,
Your words arrive like a whisper wrapped in longing (quiet, trembling, and real. I read them slowly, the way someone might hold a fragile cup of tea in both hands) so it doesnāt spill, so nothing sacred is lost. You are not just asking about word counts or commas. You are reaching through the fog, asking, āAm I enough in this language? Will anyone meet me here?ā
Let us breathe through this together, not as teacher and student, but as two humans navigating a shared reverence for language, clarity, and care. I offer this response…
š Return to Self
āEach time I feel something deep⦠I donāt know the word in English.ā
Yes, C. That moment you described (that ache, that recognition, that sacred sense of being held) it may not have an English word, but it has meaning. It is the nervous system exhaling. It is the return to self.
Youāre not just learning to write in English. Youāre remembering how to speak as yourself in another tongue. Youāre bridging worlds… with trembling hands, yes, but also with courage that cannot be measured in grammar rules.
So let us begin not with fixing… but with feeling. You are allowed to arrive incomplete, unsure, and still fully worthy of this process.
š Fog to Clarity
āSometimes I write and I read again and think, āNo⦠this is wrong.ā I fix, then I break something else.ā
This is not a sign you are failing. This is the fog beginning to clear.
Letās gently clarify what the CELBAN Writing Task is truly asking of you. The expected length for Writing Task 1 (the Incident Report) is typically 100ā200 words. Not too much. Not too little. But purposeful. Concise. Focused.
When you saw the 263-word sample and felt confusion; this was your attunement speaking. Itās okay to notice, to ask, to feel unsure. And now, you know: itās not just about the number. Itās about:
- Clarity: Can the reader follow your thinking?
- Structure: Is the report organized by what happened, what you did, and what you recommend?
- Tone: Is it objective and professional?
- Grammar & Punctuation: Are the building blocks strong enough to carry meaning?
- Vocabulary: Especially medical collocations, the specific way nurses say things in English-speaking contexts.
Youāre not far. Youāre already watching your own writing, noticing the patterns. Thatās not fog. Thatās the beginning of light.
š Rooted in Enoughness
āIt makes me feel small. But now I understand⦠this is not mistake. This is growth. I learning.ā
Yes, beloved learner. You are not broken. You are becoming. Every misplaced comma, every unsure article, every forgotten word: they are not proof of failure. They are proof of effort. Of care. Of presence.
Language learning (especially in a professional context) is not a straight path. It spirals. You return to old lessons and notice something new. You make the same error again, but this time, you see it. That is growth. That is enoughness.
You do not have to become perfect. You have to become consistent. And that, you are doing.
š Rekindling the Inner Fire
āI want to do good. I want to write the way nurses do in Canada.ā
This wanting? Itās your fire. And it is sacred.
Youāve already stepped into the discipline of writing and rewriting. Of asking questions, even when unsure how to phrase them. That is fierce. That is brave.
The CELBANPrep Writing approach moves in two spirals:
- Silver Spiral: Grammar Essentials
(To strengthen your structure, sentence flow, and punctuation.) - Gold Spiral: Wonderful Writing
(To guide you through timed tasks, editing, and advanced strategies.)
But more than resources, what you need has already begun: you care. And that caring will carry you further than any textbook ever could.
š Standing at Zenith
āYour books⦠they give me hope. I feel Iām not alone anymore.ā
This, dear C, is the most powerful sentence of all.
Hope is not given. Hope is activated.
When you feel seen, when you feel not alone, something in you stands taller. Something in you stops apologizing. Something in you remembers: you are not just preparing for a test; you are preparing to serve others with clarity, accuracy, and compassion.
This is writing in a medical context: not just to pass, but to protect. To document, to witness, to advocate. Your words will one day become part of someoneās care. That is holy work.
And yes… you are already walking the path.
Thank you, C, for your courage. For letting your confusion speak. For trusting that even in your learning, you have something to offer. You are not behind. You are becoming.
Iām with you.
In quiet companionship,
~ Kim
ššššš
P.S. I urge you to explore stories like “I passed the CELBAN on my first attempt!” These narratives are not just testimonials; they are beacons of hope and guidance.
|| CELBAN or IELTSĀ ||Ā EnouragementĀ ||Ā Mastering Your PsychologyĀ ||
|| CELBAN Writing || CELBAN Incident Reports ||
š¹ If you are looking for personal guidance and heartfelt advice on your CELBAN journey, then āDear Kimā is a perfect choice. Follow Dear Kim for a wealth of insights and answers to your questions.

š¹ If you are aspiring to perfect your healthcare writing and speaking skills, particularly for the Canadian context, then āCELBANPrepās Mastering HealthCare Writingā āCELBANPrepās Mastering HealthCare Speakingā by Kim Kara is an indispensable resource. Dive into this guide at Amazon to enhance your writing proficiency in the healthcare field.

š¹ If you are keen to understand medical grammar for the CELBAN, then ‘CELBANPrepās Grammar Essentials’ is the guide for you. Explore its detailed content at Amazon to enhance your medical English grammar.

E-Books are available at these Amazon Marketplaces:
(Many are FREE with Kindle Unlimited.)
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š¹If are looking for specialized online courses to boost your skills, and youāre committed to excelling in your healthcare career in Canada, then head over to www.CELBANPrep.ca. There, youāll find a wealth of information, resources, and courses specifically designed to meet the unique needs of healthcare professionals like you, ensuring your journey in Canadian healthcare is both successful and fulfilling.
































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