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The
Makings of a Personal Essay, Really
by Jenna Glatzer
Sometimes I can be dense when
it comes to realizing the potential of my own life experiences as essays for
magazines. I, of course, fully
believe that everything in my life is newsworthy, but sometimes have trouble
figuring out which experiences will hit home with other people.
I recently learned the secret,
and it can be summarized in one word: “Really?”
My friends know that I can
talk. I mean, I can talk!
Get me on the phone and I’m likely to tell you all about my day, from
my breakfast to my editor’s latest comments to my insomnia.
I don’t inflict my tendency toward verbosity on everyone, but at least
a few trusted souls get to bear the brunt of my solitary lifestyle and my need
to dish.
Their reactions tell me whether
or not I have the material for a marketable personal essay.
My all-time best-selling essay
is a simple story about a boy who won a stuffed animal for his little sister in
a crane machine. When I saw it
happen, I was so touched I almost cried. When
I retold it to my mom, the tears welled up again.
I got to the climactic moment—“And then he bent down and gave the
stuffed animal to his little sister and kissed her on the forehead”—and my
mom asked, “Really? That’s so
sweet!”
Bing.
“Really?” translates to “That’s a great story.”
When I tell mom about the new
toy I bought for my cat, she never asks, “Really?”
She doesn’t press me for details.
She probably can’t wait for me to shut up so she can hang up the phone
and do something productive that doesn’t involve listening to my escapades
with my cat. But when I’ve hit on
something that might actually warrant an article, her reaction won’t be a
simple “Mmm-hmm,” or “That’s great.”
It’ll be a question, or a plea to share more.
The reactions to listen for, in
addition to “Really?” are:
-Then what happened?
-What did you do?
-How did you (/he/she) react?
-Tell me more!
-That’s amazing!
-That’s so cool!
A few weeks ago, I was talking
to Jamie Blyth (I’m helping to write his book, Fear Is No Longer My Reality)
about how far I’ve come in beating my anxiety disorder.
One of the things I mentioned was that I used to have an
obsessive-compulsive disorder related to food.
He wanted to know more. I
explained that I went through a two-year phase where I ate nothing but canned
foods and other food with really long shelf lives.
“Really?” he asked.
Oh.
I hadn’t thought about that phase of mine in quite some time, and had
forgotten that it might be intriguing to people who’ve never experienced OCD.
OCD as an overall topic has been done many times, but this detail—the
canned foods and my almost deadly diet—hasn’t.
It doesn’t belong in a how-to article.
It works because of the telling, because of the personal nature of the
story. And as I sat down to write
it, a beautifully marketable essay formed almost effortlessly.
Think about what details of
your story set it apart from similar stories.
Countless essays have been written about alcoholism, eating disorders,
miscarriage, drug abuse, abusive marriages, finding God, giving birth... that
doesn’t mean you can’t tell your story.
You just have to find a unique angle, a new way of telling it, a nugget
that people will remember.
The same effortless type of
story formed when I told people how Anthony and I bought our house.
We fell so in love with it that we kept coming to visit and take
pictures—we would sit on the other side of the lake, facing the owners’
backyard, and just hug and dream of what it would be like to live there.
When it came time to make an
offer, we were immediately outbid by thousands of dollars and couldn’t match
the price. We went to say goodbye
to the owners, and they told the Realtor to take it off the market—we were the
people they wanted to live in the home they’d loved for 40 years.
They had seen us from their back window all the times we came to admire
the house from afar, and they knew we would appreciate the gardens, the
greenhouse, the lake. So they took
a loss of thousands of dollars because they wanted us to live our dream.
Quick, what was your reaction
to that story? I hope it was
“That’s amazing!,” because that’s the reaction I got from nearly
everyone who heard the story. Within
a couple of weeks of moving in, I sold the essay to A Cup of Comfort and
sent the anthology to the previous owners of the house.
If someone’s eyes light up
when you tell a story, chances are excellent that there’s a market for it.
If one person finds it interesting, inspiring, hilarious, or moving,
others likely will, too.
Consider your friends and
family your test audience. Test out
your experiences on them. If they
don’t press you for more details, either the story isn’t there, or you need
a more compelling way to tell it.
You can also test by e-mail;
send a few friends a note about a recent experience of yours and see how many of
them react to it. Note, too, how
quickly they react. If they respond
right after reading it, their interest levels are probably high.
If they respond a week later and mention, “By the way, that was a nice
story,” it likely didn’t pass the test.
Personal experiences don’t
need to be earth-shattering to be worthy of print.
They just need to be interesting, insightful, and emotion-provoking in
almost any sense of the word. Your
story may make someone happy, mad, upset, horrified, shocked... as long as you
can elicit a strong emotion, you can draw readers.
And editors like writers who can draw readers.
Go forth and share your
experiences. Personal essays are
wonderful gifts to share with the world. Really!
Jenna Glatzer is the editor-in-chief of
Absolute Write (www.absolutewrite.com).
She has written for hundreds of national and online magazines, including
Physical, Woman's World, Woman's Own, Salon.com, and Contemporary Bride.
She's a contributing editor at Writer's Digest and her latest book is MAKE A
REAL LIVING AS A FREELANCE WRITER, which you can find at www.jennaglatzer.com.
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