Speechwriters, socializing
September 20, 2017
A "wallflower" writer anticipates being simultaneously out of her comfort zone and among her friends at next month's PSA World Conference.
Iโve attended enough gatherings of speechwriters to know that our profession tends to skew toward quiet, reserved types:
We like the hushed company of a keyboard.
Weโre able to articulate big ideas in beautiful proseโso long as someone else delivers.
And happy hours find us clenching cocktails with white-knuckled resolve to be witty and social. Weโve got the witty part down; itโs the social component that trips us up. I donโt know about you, but my happiest hour is when Iโve logged the requisite mix and mingle time and can retire to bed and a good book.
Donโt get me wrong: I love us!
I relish the time I get to spend with my partners in scribe. I learn from you, laugh with you, commiserate and enjoy long neglected comradery. Look up from your iPhone and I might even venture out of my solitary corner to join you in yours.
So, in defense of introverted writers everywhere, letโs consider the perks of being a wallflowerโand why weโre better equipped than we think to mix and mingleโand enjoy one anotherโs company!
Weโre inherently curiousโabout most anything: We want to know how in the heck the caterer stuffed ricotta, olives and walnuts into a lowly fig โฆ why the freelancer from Portland is giving the cold shoulder to the linguistics professor โฆ and whatโs up with the disco-dancing actuaries partying in the adjoining room?ย
Weโre great listeners. Weโre skilled in asking questions, interviewing tough subjects, leaving expansive white space for our principals and bar partners to fill. Weโre genuinely interested in othersโand frankly a little reluctant to talk about ourselves. In my mind, that reticence is a benefit, not a liability. Because after all, the best conversationalists are the best listeners.
Our powers of observation are of Marvel Comic proportion.ย We notice minutiae that others miss: The DJโs tribal tattoo (weโll look up the Mayan symbol laterโor refill our wine glass and ask.) The flirtation happening among the wait staff. A parking lot altercation observed from the ballroom balcony. A menu misspelling. (We, of course, can master hors dโoeuvres and prosciutto without spellcheck.)
Weโre writing all the time. We may not be overtly scribbling on the proverbial cocktail napkin, but you can bet your Raspberry Mojito that weโre taking notes and collecting ideas that will show up somewhere, somehow. Viewing drama play out from a distance gives us perspectiveโand plots and personalities weโll pursue later.
We donโt steal anyoneโs thunder. Weโre used to working behind the scenes, scripting the stars and leaving applause, laugh lines and admiration to others. Heck, making others look and sound good is our bread and butter! So, at social events, we are the most polite and appreciative audience you could hope for. Weโre not going to interrupt, one-up or out-do. And if a storyโs good, weโll give it a glowing promoโand retell it with constructive edits.
Our security deposit is safe. While our louder, party-loving PR peeps may get rowdy and raise the roof, Iโve found my fellow speechwriters to be exceptionally gracious and gentle-mannered. Weโre not going to allow ourselves to be over-served, skinny-dip in the hotel pool, or brawl about whose shareholder meeting address suckedโentertaining as those character eccentricities might be.
Finally, weโve got a great sense of timing. We love rhythm and cadence. We know how to stretch a pause. Tease a punchline. Our phrasing and staging expertise has taught us how to make an entrance: we driftโrather than jumpโinto parties and conversation. We move cautiously, adroitly. We await openings and introductions.
And, perhaps most importantly, when weโve had quite enough, we know how to mapโand makeโan easy, inconspicuous exit!
Editor's note: The author will be among the "wallflowers" gathered from around the world at the 2017 World Conference of the Professional Speechwriters Association, Oct. 16-18 in D.C. A few seats remain at this conference, which isย nicknamed "Speechwriters in the Sunshine," for reasons that this video from the 2015 event makes clear.