Using the sun's reflection might help me find me before I get to the page. Either that or I'll take a selfie. Photo credit | EKHumphrey |
I pride myself with writing what my clients need written. If
I have all the information I need, I strive for getting at least 110 percent of
what they want. Generally, I expect some back and forth to smooth out any rough
edges.
I’ve been working with a company to redesign and idiot-proof
my website from myself (I inadvertently
imploded it last year) and design incentive pieces. They are doing the heavy
lifting for me, but I am writing most of the content myself.
I launched my website years ago. I updated and added to it
as I went along. It has been a labor of love (well, until last year) and I’ve
rarely received input from anyone else. Until now.
I turned in a 20-plus page “assignment” a couple weeks ago and
the feedback stopped me in my tracks.
For such a piece, I followed the writing rules I know by
heart. Here are some of them:
- Write informally (use “you,” not slang)
- Write clearly
- Be honest
- Make sure to explain well (sometimes oversimplifying is better)
The feedback: I needed to add more of me into the mix.
In reviewing what I had written, I realize that I had
stepped out of my normal chatty self and returned to following the rules and being
The Writer. Sure, I was conveying the information clearly, but I wasn’t
connecting with the readers in the way that would bring them closer to knowing me.
I needed to stop being my own client and start being me. I had left my heart
out of my writing and my writing for a living had appeared on the page.
I started reviewing some of my recent fiction and recognized
the voice of The Writer working for her clients, but not the me I want my
readers to know.I need to spend some time reflecting on what I want my readers to know about me and who I am before I sit down to write for me.
From now on, I’m going to reflect and reconnect with me
before I sit down to write my work.
How about you? Have you ever had that happen where you wrote
something, but left your true self on the sidelines when you were supposed to be in the game?
Elizabeth King Humphrey is a writer and editor waiting to
see what Tropical Storm Arthur is going to do today. Her publications include
Idiot’s Guide: Gluten-Free Eating.
2 comments:
This is interesting! I think I do this all the time with my fiction, and now it's something I will keep in the back of my mind, too for my nonfiction.
I struggle with this constantly.
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