Timothy Wren - Narrative Reel

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Description

Tim recorded, wrote, created Foley and edited this reel in his home studio.

I'm a keen runner so it felt natural to provide the first clip in my own voice about that topic. The second clip, which is delivered as character narration, is taken from a war diary from the relative of a family friend.

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Vocal Characteristics

Language

English

Voice Age

Middle Aged (35-54)

Accents

British (England - Liverpool, Manchester, Lancashire, Cheshire) British (General) British (Received Pronunciation - RP, BBC)

Transcript

Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
Timothy Ren narrative riel. It's totally normal and natural to doubt whether you can actually do this marathon thing. Anxiety over finished time, the distance required letting people down or whether you'll need the loo once, twice or pretty much all the time. It's very common. Learn your coping and management strategies early. When something bothers you, learn ways to work with it. Don't let it define you. Listen to your body and notice how you're feeling and make the right choices. Your self belief will grow as you get more training under your belt. You won't always feel good. In fact, sometimes you'll feel awful like you want to give up. Finishing a marathon isn't about doing Mohr Neglecting other things in your life or no pain, No gain. It's about integrating regular running into your life to create a happy, fitter purpose field approach to your marathon goals. Don't get carried away at the start. Run your own race. 26.2 miles is a long way. Part two character narration. Wednesday, December 29th 1915 Off all of the excitement I've been through today rivals the lot. I was on water duty at the tanks when a shell burst with a fearful explosion just over my head, I instinctively crouched down for I had no time to take cover. The flash almost blinded me. I made it once to the nearest dugout, which happened to be the engineers. Two others had by this time burst 20 to 30 yards away. Although following rapidly on from each other, there were 14 shells, five of which were duds. Two of Thie engineers, on coming out to **** for the fuses had to flatten themselves out as suddenly another shell burst just beyond them. They then returned to the dugout, laughing heartily at this near escape.