I love my job
I've had a very stressful day... but in the midst of it, I had a moment. It was a mere transitory, ephemeral emotion but before I get too disillusioned again, or scared, I just want to say...
I love my job!
Lucky me.
I've had a very stressful day... but in the midst of it, I had a moment. It was a mere transitory, ephemeral emotion but before I get too disillusioned again, or scared, I just want to say...
I love my job!
Lucky me.
I've done something I haven't done in a very, very long time - I stayed at home for two solid days (minus going out to college and buying groceries) and spent the most productive time writing, cleaning, organising...
... and there just seems no end to it.
After two days of general sorting-out stuff, this is a picture of one half of my L-shaped room... and I swear I have been cleaning it. If you look at the bottom right-hand corner of my room, behind where those magazines are in the foreground, was originally a stack of newspapers stacked at least 4 feet high.
I laboured through all of them - picking out those stories I needed for research... prisoners, gambling, casinos, ID cards, Rupert Murdoch interview, Opus Dei, ooh, and yes, a nice cut-out of a tasty-looking Brad Pitt... (although I must say, I'm starting to find him considerably less attractive ever since he left Anniston) Anyway, I've done that now and junked all the newspapers - at which my flatmates actually said you mean ALL THAT has been in your room all this time? Oh, the scorn.
I still have to pick particular spots on my floor in order to walk from my door to my table but I assure you this will be sorted soon... there's only so much one can do at once! I'm happy to announce that I actually got all my re-writing sorted and my course-work file, due this friday, is looking good. I'm actually ahead of deadlines... a rarity, only slightly short of a miracle for me, but let's not talk too much about it in case I jinx it.
After a week at PM, I was actually quite sad to leave. Everyone there was nice and friendly. We even went out for drinks on Thursday and got slightly pissed. The editor had a really charming face, not at all in a sleazy way, but more like the sort of feeling you get when you meet a friend's Dad and you can tell immediately he's a nice, decent, funny bloke.
I was also pleasantly surprised by my ability to bang out the average of 3/4 news stories a day, something I used to do with greater difficulty, but now I'm finding it actually quite enjoyable. And I've got another story to be published within a month. (yay)
Which leads me to conclude...
I think I have finally mastered the greatest skill (in writing) of all... RUTHLESSNESS.
Or at least part of it. It only comes with time and experience and boy did I use to struggle those lonely nights (and mornings, and afternoons) in front of my computer trying to include too much information, agonising over the words, re-structuring the paragraphs... It now finally seems easier for it to fall into place. Simply because I'm now more ruthless. Nothing is now too precious, and you tend to know what you should exclude immediately, whereas in my more amateur days, it was not quite as obvious to me.
I'm not being complacent. This is only one aspect of writing. There's too much still to go, but at least I feel some inner development. I mean, I would be wasting my time if I didn't. And I don't like to waste time. Believe what you will.
What pisses me off most is so many people think writing is a piece of piss. Writing is, actually. Good writing isn't. I guess it's much easier to write now, I agree, with the whole blogger/citizen journalism explosion thing going on. But too many underestimate the training required for this profession. It's not something you can just bang out and expect to be published. It's all a matter of writing for audiences, understanding the medium, or more broadly, the industry... so many dimensions I can't even begin to articulate, which is probably why I get half-annoyed, half-exasperated, half-smug-beyond-belief whenever my boyfriend says he could do my job anyday.
It's not just all about the writing. And even then, I promise you it is really harder than it looks!
Sigh... right, sorry about the rant. I shall now stop going on about my job. It's something I've resolved to live with, a cross I can't not bear.
I realised the other day in mute horror that I am now reluctant to write - on paper, that is. I have taken for granted that I now type faster than I can write, so when I'm not near a computer, but I'm dying to write something, the inertia to use a pen and paper is so great, I end up not writing anyway. By which time when I get to a computer, I've forgotten what I wanted to say. Oh the complexities of modern life!
Over and out...
So I've started work at another magazine. This time at a trade publication, and it's really not too bad. They've just moved into a swanky new building so I've got a great workspace, with a really comfy seat, free stationery and a Mac - except that it's still operating on OS 9. sigh. I kept pressing the F9 key to toggle the screens but it was futile. It took me the whole day to accept it - I kept pressing it despite knowing it wouldn't work unless it was in OS 10.
Anyway, getting up this morning was seriously torturous. I dragged myself out of bed feeling like I'd rather kill myself, and when I got in the shower, I suddenly had this one fleeting, terrifying thought - that the emotion I was feeling, that immense dread from waking up in the early hours of the morning when my body was forced to emerge from another realm where it was comfortable, to one where it was massively reluctant to function in - that dread, was something that I was gonna have to face almost every single day of my life for at least the next 30 years when I inevitably have to forsake my student existence and fully embrace the life of a working professional.
I was so overwhelmed by an uncontrollable wave of melancholy.
I'm not exxagerating, and I'm not being a wuss about getting up early. I'm not sure if it was because I was starting work at a new place and didn't know what to expect, or whatever else it was that I feared. It took all my rational energy to resist the sudden strong urge to jump out, put on my clothes, get on a train to where J is and just fling my arms around him, burying my face forever in his chest and never letting go. Never having to experience that dread again.
Weirdly, it's not like I don't like working. I was fine the minute I got to work - I loved that I was actually being productive. I read so many newspapers (even the Irish Independent and The Scotsman), absorbing all the headlines, and making up for neglecting it the past couple of weeks. I roamed the streets of Farringdon on my own during lunch, soaking in the marvellous sunshine and taking in the buzz of the working London middle-class dining at street cafes. I even had another fleeting thought that the prospect of working full-time in London...contrary to what I previously thought, is not so bad. The places I've worked at, most of them leave at the latest, 6pm. Unlike the hours I'm used to slogging back home where I'm always on call, always busy and could never arrange a dinner appointment. And I was an intern then. What would working full-time there be like?
I know the answer. And maybe that's why I had that momentary dread.
It is the combination of being excited that my career is finally going to take off at last - and the dread that it is actually starting, in full gear. Not like the semi-working, semi-student life I'm leading now, where even though I'm still writing and working, I always have the option of having a few days in a row where I can get up at 10am and later.
I'm actually going to get a salary, probably a mortagage, and the full stress of adult life will finally descend mercilessly on me.
And I guess I'm afraid I will disappoint myself. It's a remote possibly I don't even want to think of, much less admit. And I don't think it will happen.
But once that life begins and I'm going to face maybe that same dread, or a fraction of it, each morning, there's no turning back.
So maybe I should just go to bed earlier tonight. And hope that feeling doesn't revisit me again tomorrow.
I've been working at The Ecologist this week and everything there is organic, re-used and recycled.
For the first time in my life, I was actually worried when I bought a packet of peanut cookies for everyone and was afraid that the packaging was made entirely with plastic.
People turn the lights off when they exit the kitchen and there are green and red bins to tell you what sort of rubbish goes where to get recycled.
Suddenly I feel like I've been living like an irresponsible citizen all my life and my eyes have finally been opened to the holy grail of the conscience consumer.
So now, where do I begin?
Lots have exciting things have happened, including an amazing trip to Venice where it feels like you're living in a painting and everything is impressionistically surreal, surviving the worst bout of violent food poisoning ever in my life, getting paid for the first time by News International (a nice sum of 100 quid!) for my story, getting ** and having an amazing heavy weekend, and meeting lots of interesting people since...
I have a ridiculously long to-do list scribbled in all my random notebooks, scraps of paper, my mini-diary (which I keep taking along, meaning to buy a proper one for ages, only to realize a quarter of the year has already passed - how the fuck did that happen), emailed to myself and the list keeps getting longer and time keeps passing quicker and I remain, somehow, stationary in my own transient, make-believe time frame, while everything rolls along mercilessly.
My mind is so cluttered and the only solution, I can think of, is to learn the skills of teleportation. Then I can save travelling time (fuck that) and whenever I think of something I could compel myself to do it right there and then, instead of pushing it to the back of my mind with various excuses.
I wish people will stop writing in cliches - but I guess they are cliches for a reason huh.
I've recently learnt to write quicker, I think.
I have so much left to write.