I always forget how little I actually like the writing process.
I like research. I like interviewing. I love feeling important and saying “Hi, I’m a journalist calling on behalf of (publication).” I even like transcribing interview tapes. I fall in love with what people say to me. I’m fascinated by their lives, their opinions, their attitudes. I love that my work gives me license to be a nosey parker.
I don’t mind structuring a story, looking for patterns, working out common threads. I can write narratives, weaving these people’s words in with facts and background and description.
But I hate picking and choosing, leaving things out. I always write long. And then I have to cut. At first it’s okay, just editing my own work, looking for laziness, repeated phrases, clumsy constructions. And then it’s horrible. A word here. A sentence there. Reading the same story, over and over and over, trying to decide which paragraphs live and which die. I can do this to other people’s work without hesitation. But these sentences are the stories I’ve been told and I have a responsibility to my respondent to present their story accurately, not to skimp and use them.
And I hate the feeling that I *can’t* write, that the writing is pedestrian, because it’s not as florid as my poetry, because all the words are every day words. I read articles from The Guardian and I think, how did I ever think I could write?
Anyhow, I just need to cut another 280 words out of this #&@^$*$)@$_$R@_*$@&$ article and it will all be okay.