I was just sitting around feeling miserable about the achy state of my heart and my recent overwhelming home ant infestation when my neighbor Jay called out from his back porch:
"Sue, hey Sue."
I came out to see what he wanted and he pointed out a glowing red sky in the distance.
"You wanna go check it out?" I asked. Even though he was wearing his jammies, he said yes. Jay is a good sport that way.
We hopped in the Bluemobile and went looking for news. We had to drive around for a bit because the power was out downtown and it was dripping with blackness and we took a few twists and turns because everything looked so unfamiliar in the dark dark dark.
But eventually we found a hillside on fire, a downed power line, some firefighters and sheriffs, and a handful of onlookers. I dug my press pass out of the glove box and dragged Jay out of the car.
"Um, I'm in my PJs here," he said. I think he might have been a little high, too.
He was too late to stop me. I was already in girl reporter mode and started talking to people and found the guy who had discovered the fire. I scrawled some quotes on a folder I had found in my car because a notebook was nowhere to be found.
After a couple minutes, I decided that it wasn't that big of a deal and that Jay probably wanted to go home, so I brought him back and called the night editor with my quotes. Somebody else will get all the details from the fire department and write the story tomorrow.
I don't care that I'm not writing the story or that I won't get more than an "also contributed" at the bottom.
It just put me in such a better frame of mind. Me going out on a news story is like how a border collie must feel while herding sheep: doing what I am meant to do. All neurons firing. Happy.
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9 comments:
You're like a German Shepherd that needs to wear a backpack.
I don't know, I just wanted to stick with the worker dog analogies.
Work can be a good way to turn one's energies into something positive. Especially girl reporter mode energies :o)
Glad you're up at at em' as my Grandpa would say.
I think my favorite line is "Um, I'm in my PJ's here"
Unlike you, I hated covering the fires. I always felt so intrusive.
what i miss most about the newsroom is that adrenaline buzz in the air when a big story breaks. it's nice to hear that recapturing that feeling is possible, even if it's rare.
You reporters think the weirdest things are fun. Despite being gone from a daily paper for 5+ years, Hubby still gets excited about a brushfire.
how did i miss the fact that you are a reporter? I was one, too, in my former life. Cool.
Didn't know either. And I don't even play one on tv!
I have a real job, too. Freelance reporting is just what I do for fun. Weird, huh?
How intrepid of you! I am inspired.
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