Thanks to Esquire’s
September 2014 (where EHeads was cover), a nostalgic wave of writing hit
me. I was reading their section on
Essays, and I realized that I haven’t been writing. Well, I haven’t been writing like I used to --- prolific,
consistently melodramatic and insightful.
Over the years, due to career demands and my own personal “happenings”,
my writing has dwindled from passion to scarce (in terms of quantity I
suppose), from painfully frank and truthful to objective (which we claimed as
“technical”) and from deluge to very erratic. And whenever I get to chance upon
essays or newspaper columns (even blog posts!) that are beautifully written, I
always find myself saying, “I wish I wrote that myself.” or “I could have
written that myself.” or “Why didn’t I think of writing about that?!”
Even when I do say
I miss writing, my life is an assortment of all things that need to be done –
writing not included, unless it is required for work. There is no more “writing for my own” where I would feverishly
write everything that I feel. I
used to write how I saw the world (sounding mature and all so ideal, idealistic
and knowing, now all in hindsight of course!), on how I wished my world would
be. I remember writing dedicatedly
more when I was in love and in a romantic relationship. To be young and expressive, and yes, to
have all the time in the world, with nary a care. I wrote about it all – in
emails I wrote friends, in letters I used to send, in a blog that I have long
deleted (the posts of which I didn’t bother to save! *tears up*), in love
letters I sent to my past loves (how I wanted to say “lovers” but the term made
me feel uneasy as if those moments were clandestine and very underground, which
were very not so). But then again,
to use it like it meant “that love that compels you to go crazy and live like
it’s you and me against the world” then yes, it would then be appropriate. My colorful, love-filled young past
makes me digress.
When it comes to
writing, my own writing included, then I was editing and consciously checking
myself for errors. Over the years
though, I have taken it easy on punctuations --- a misplaced comma here and
there (but not to alter the meaning please!). But like what Teddy Locsin Jr.
said in that same Esquire issue --- all these grammar rules you let slip but if
you’ve been used to reading (and writing), you can easily spot a bad
sentence. I must add, it is very
easy for me to read a writing without a heart.
I have a number of
staff under me, and writing is our bread and butter. For some reason, I know when they’re into what they wrote,
and I tell them when they are not.
How do I know it? If they’re into writing, they are particular about
everything: their choice of words is deliberate, their “storytelling” is seamless and their
coherence is spot-on. More than
anything, they are careful and attentive to details because they write for The
Boss, whose decisions could be anchored on what he would read from what was
written.
For most times,
when I am asked to write, I think I write the simplest in my team. My sentences are often simple, the
entire document is brief, and I want to claim it as coherent and compliant to
what is expected. Writing in our
workplace takes mastery and experience.
It is anchored on a defined set of standards that everyone is hoped (and
expected!) to adhere to. Before I
became a boss, I was a staff then and had very meticulous mentors. In hindsight, it was easy to learn when
everything is predictable and the parameters were in place. I would want to say that, as a boss, my
standards and expectations are predictable and defined. I look for the same things, raise the
same issues, ask the same questions.
Writing is this easy. I do
not even attempt to change my staff’s style of writing. I only edit very glaring grammatical
errors. I let MS Office Apps do
that job. I am always and
consistently after substance not style, and it is a known standard within the
team.
How I wish,
however, I could have the opportunity to read how my staff write off-work. It must be a dream. (Hmmm… I could probably ask them but I wonder
if there would be “takers.” I
could try asking some though.)
For starters, I should
go back to writing. But when I do,
I should also brace myself for opening the gates of emotions and flooding
myself with realizations. But then
again, if these will compel me to write even more, then the surge of (my)
innermost thoughts is welcome anytime.
1 comment:
Thanks for blogging again, Pie! You inspired me to revitalize my blog. Happy New Year!
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