15 minutes of fame

What a very bizarre few days! A story I wrote back in January about an incident that happened last summer has this week hit the headlines around the world. It has appeared in publications in New Zealand and South Korea, to name a couple, and was one of the most popular stories on the BBC yesterday- as well as being in The Daily Mail, The Independent, The Sun, The Metro….

It all goes back to last July when I discovered a hair wrapped so tightly around Orla’s toes that it was cutting off the circulation – a condition I later discovered was called toe tourniquet syndrome.

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My article in Take A Break magazine

After writing about it for Take A Break when I went back to work in January, the article was published last week and has led to way more interest than I ever imagined.

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In the BBC Scotland studio yesterday

I was invited onto BBC Radio Scotland’s Kaye Adams Programme to talk about what happened to Orla.

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One of the ‘top stories’ on the BBC

And the online version of the story became one of the top stories of the day on the BBC website.

As a journalist, I’ve often had occasion to Google my own name to see where my stories have appeared, but it is rather bizarre to do a search and have mine and Orla’s faces grinning back at me.

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A Google search of my name

Even today I’m still being contacted by various news outlets asking me to send them pictures. It’s very strange being on the other side of a story – and I definitely know which side I prefer!

All in a day’s work

In my job, I have witnessed some awful things. I have arrived on the scene just moments after a young girl was decapitated by a car in a hit-and-run. I have seen photos during an inquest of a father who hanged himself from a tree, and watched the utter heartbreak of his grieving family as they unwittingly looked at the same images. I have seen fear, squalor, depravity. I have interviewed murderers and had to be polite and professional on the phone to convicted sex offenders and paedophiles as they ranted about my newspaper’s coverage of their horrific actions. I have listened to a woman’s graphic account of years of child abuse at the hands of a family member. I have seen a dead body after a week lying undiscovered in the Water of Leith, bloated, discoloured, barely recognisable as the man he once was. I have drank tea in the home of a family who lost their beautiful ten-year-old boy to a hit-and-run driver in a stolen car trying to escape police capture.

Two of those things made me cry. I remember clearly the drive home through tears after watching the devastated family in front of me in the courtroom sobbing when the coroner – rather cruelly, in my opinion –  showed them the photos they could never unsee. And I cried every night for a week after listening to the father of the young boy so tragically killed on his way home from school talk about the son he would never see again. I couldn’t get my head around how life could be so unfair, and also couldn’t begin to understand how the boy’s grieving family were capable of such immense courage and resilience. I still can’t let myself think about it too much.

Both those stories I covered relatively early on in my career. I didn’t grow less sympathetic as the years went on, but I did grow hardened to the fact that life can be horrendous at times and that bad things happen every single day. They just happen. As a journalist, you quickly develop a skin thick enough to allow you to deal with situations like the ones described above; to get involved in someone’s tragedy to the point where they open up to you and share their innermost grief and suffering, and then walk away and barely think of it ever again. You also develop a humour black enough to make light of the most devastating situations. I quickly got to the stage where I no longer cried about the things I’d witnessed in my job, and stopped taking everyone’s pain and anguish home with me.

But today I’m worried about an interview I have to carry out with a young mum who lost her newborn baby. Since having my own child, I struggle to deal with stories like this anymore. I cannot even begin to imagine the pain and there seem to be no words capable of describing it. Where the rookie reporter me would have felt great sympathy, I am now capable of that more powerful emotion of empathy.

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Today might be another day that I cry.

Never let the facts get in the way of a good story

If I had a pound for every time someone said that to me, I’d be lying on a beach in the Bahamas sipping on a mojito right now. Along with “ooh you’re a journalist, better watch what I say, I don’t want to read about myself in the paper tomorrow”, it’s one of the most annoying things anyone can say about my line of work. Because the frustrating truth is that facts so often get in the way of a good story.

I’ve been working on an idea on and off for a couple of weeks now, putting in a lot of effort to get reluctant and sceptical people to speak to me and building a bond of trust. I know there’s a good story to be told….but I also know that anecdotal evidence is just not going to cut it when it comes to pitching this one to newsdesks, and the figures just aren’t there to support it. Not because it’s not true, but simply because the figures don’t exist in the way a news editor will want them to. That all sounds a bit cryptic, but I’m not going to give the story away as I’m not quite at the giving up stage just yet.Business woman crying head in hands

On the plus side, it’s International Women’s Day….