Heading into my 12th year of writing this blog –
by far the longest job I have ever held if you can call this unpaid undertaking
a job and I do – I thought I’d take a
moment to consider this odd and original – I’d like to believe – way of pleasantly
passing the time.
Okay.
What am I doing? And
how am I doing it?
The “What?” part is easy.
An idea comes to me, and, after “whatever it takes” hours of elaborating
and shaping, I publish the finished product on my blog, hoping the people who
blunder into this venue enjoy it.
The best reader reaction I ever received was, “You throw gold out the window.” I don’t know. It’s very flattering, but come on, “Gold”? What I’d be truly content with regularly accomplishing is this:
The best reader reaction I ever received was, “You throw gold out the window.” I don’t know. It’s very flattering, but come on, “Gold”? What I’d be truly content with regularly accomplishing is this:
An honest and readable reflection of what I was trying to
convey.
And how well am I… wait.
lemme say this.
When it comes to the “What?” – meaning the content of this blog – I am enthusiastically
open to outside suggestion. As with most
people – possibly all of them – I do not think about what I do not think
about. And I only write about what I do.
If there is something I forgot about that you’re interested
in hearing about, let me know. Maybe I
forgot about it by mistake.
Now…
When it comes to the “how” of this exercise – the “stylistic
expression”, if you will – well, that’s pretty much “on me.” (So no comments, “Write different!”)
I am, however, concerned, taking stock entering my twelfth
year of doing this, that I have, at least somewhat, lost my stylistical direction.
Specifically, many of my blog posts are too long. Revisiting my recently reprised “Christmas
Chestnuts”, I was disturbed by how extended those posts were and how much could
have easily been edited out.
“Twelfth Year Resolution”: I am determined to “write shorter.”
By which, I hopefully also mean “better.”
Let me explain how “too long” happened.
No. First, this.
From my earliest professional outings, writing weekly columns
in the newspaper not dissimilar to this,
I intended to tell stories on paper – which evolved into cyber-paper – that would feel like you and I are together
someplace, and I am telling you a story.
Simple, (hopefully) interesting, and narratively complete. The plan, compressed to a fare-the-well:
I wanted to “write talk.”
The thing is,
Taking that intention literally, well… you can “write talk”,
But it will be virtually unreadable.
I have mentioned a book called The Essential Lenny Bruce – literal transcriptions of Lenny’s cumulated
performances, turned into a book.
Which I bought and by
which I was thoroughly let down.
The transcriber did their best to convey the tone, tenor and
timing… and those are just the “T’s”… of Lenny’s classic performances. The thing is, no matter how hard they tried –
the pause-reflecting “three dots”, the emphasizing italics, the SCREAMING
CAPITALIZATIONS – they could not successfully do that. With literal
transcription, you miss everything but the words.
So there’s a conundrum.
Your intention is to come genuinely "alive" in your communications. “Literal transcription” seems like it would work, but disappointingly doesn’t.
The most effective alternative?
You write “simulated
talk.”
Writing that convincingly sounds like it’s “talk, but it isn’t.
That’s what I do.
The problem is, as with every cobbled solution, there is a subsequent
problem. The subsequent problem here is,
“Simulated talk” is a “hybrid.”
Triggering the subsequent problem of “proportion”; to wit, how
much “writing” and how much “talk”?
And once you include “writing” to any extent, the subsequent problem then is,
Exactly what kind of “writing” is it going to be?
More about that the next time.
Because I am trying to write shorter.
5 comments:
Enjoy the length. I read your blog with my morning coffee. I’m retired and not in a hurry. Enjoy a relaxing meal and not fast food. On another subject related to your robbery misfortune on New Year’s we are now on holidays in the Dominican Republic and double and triple checking the door as we leave and enter our room. So the blog has both entertainment value as well as practical advice. My wife calls checking that the door is locked “doing the Pomerantz” but I prefer to think of it as the “reverse Pomerantz”.
You said,
"Let me explain how “too long” happened. No. First, this."
There you go. That's why. But that's what is great about your blog. It is like talking to someone who has so much to say. Although you spend a lot of time making it like a spontaneous conversation, it's not pasteurized and pruned into an unappetizing goulash.
Your readers do ask questions from time to time but I think you're writing your posts well ahead of when they are published so answering a question that is days or weeks old doesn't make sense.
Like FFS, I read your blog every morning and find that it gets the creative side of my mind going in preparation for my work.
Glad to see you are stilling plugging at it. There are fewer and fewer of these on line. I started almost 14 years ago and for some reason still going. There is always something that I got to say. Some point to get across.
Don't know how you do it but glad you do.
Well said!
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