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Yvonne Smith: The Quiet Climb
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“The Quiet Climb” chronicles the real-life journey of a new copyeditor and proofreader navigating the publishing world. From red pens to rejections, from hopeful cold pitches to near-misses and first wins, this blog pulls back the curtain on what it’s like to break into editing. Whether you’re a fellow freelancer starting out, an author wondering what goes into the process, or simply curious about the human side of publishing, here you'll find honesty, insight, and a little courage in every post.

 

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Top tags: #CopyeditorJourney  #CraftAndCare  #EditingWithEmpathy  #Editorial Reflections  #EditorialPhilosophy  #FreelancerLife  #ManuscriptRefinement  #PublishingInsights  #RealTalk  #VoiceDrivenEditing  #WriterEditorCollaboration 

My Philosophy About Editing

Posted By Yvonne Smith, Friday, July 18, 2025

I believe that editing isn’t just a technical skill; It’s a way of thinking, listening, and honoring the relationship between writer, reader, and story. Here are my thoughts:

Interpretation vs. Interruption

Every manuscript has a voice. My job is to hear it clearly—not to speak over it. That means resisting the urge to “fix” what’s unfamiliar, and instead asking:

  • What is this sentence trying to do?
  • What emotion is this scene trying to evoke?
  • What rhythm is this writer leaning into?

Editing isn’t about imposing my style. It’s about helping the writer’s style land with clarity and purpose.

Emotion vs. Precision

Behind every sentence is a choice. Behind every choice is a writer. And behind every writer is a tangle of doubt, hope, and effort. I believe editing should be approached with empathy—not just for the words, but for the person who wrote them.

That means:

  • Flagging gently.
  • Explaining clearly.
  • And remembering that critique is not correction. It’s collaboration.

Editing is about knowing when to break the rules and when to fight for them.

Meaning vs. Mechanics

Yes, I care about grammar. I care about consistency, parallel structure, and the Oxford comma. But I care more about meaning. Does the sentence say what the writer meant to say? Does the story move the reader in the way it was meant to?

Sometimes the “wrong” sentence is the truest one. And sometimes, the cleanest text is the least alive.

Editing is about finding the balance between precision and rhythm.

Conversation vs. Verdict

I don’t believe in edits that arrive like verdicts. I believe in edits that ask questions, offer options, and invite dialogue. Because the best edits don’t just improve the manuscript, they deepen the writer’s understanding of their own work.

Editing is about alignment.

Final Thought

Editing is not a performance, it’s a practice. It’s not about showing what I know, it’s about helping the writer articulate what they know. And if I’ve done my job well, the final draft won’t sound like me; It’ll sound more fully and more clearly like the writer. 

Tags:  #CraftAndCare  #EditingWithEmpathy  #EditorialPhilosophy  #ManuscriptRefinement  #VoiceDrivenEditing  #WriterEditorCollaboration 

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The Quiet Climb, Post 1: At the Starting Line (With a Stack of Style Guides)

Posted By Yvonne Smith, Thursday, July 3, 2025

When I decided to change my career to become a Copyeditor and Proofreader, I knew I wasn’t stepping onto an express elevator to success. I was taking the stairs—every carefully crafted email, every silent rejection, every late-night scroll through CMOS—to prove that I was ready to do this for real.

I had the training—and I’m still racking up the certificates. The passion. A professional website I’d built from scratch with soft hands and stubborn hope. But what I didn’t have was a client list. A testimonial. A reason for someone to trust me with their words other than, “I promise I care deeply, and I’m good at this.”

So, I did what many new freelancers do:
🔹 Set up my Upwork and Fiverr profiles
🔹 Created project catalogs and descriptions that whispered, “I know what I’m doing”
🔹 Researched keyword placement for my gigs like I was preparing for SEO midterms
🔹 Spent hours tweaking thumbnails and taglines to sound sharp—but not shouty

I pitched. I crafted cover letters that balanced humility with capability. I considered offering rock-bottom prices… and then stopped myself. I didn’t want to be hired because I was cheap. I wanted to be hired because I was right for the job.

And still… nothing.

The silence was loud. No messages. No bites. Just a dashboard of proposals marked “not viewed,” and a creeping voice in the back of my head asking, “Who did you think you were?”

But the thing is, I am an editor. I do have an eye for voice, rhythm, logic, and flow. I know how to cut clutter, preserve tone, and polish until the prose hums. I just hadn’t been given the chance—yet.

So, I kept moving:

  • I revamped my website again (and again).
  • I cold-messaged potential clients on LinkedIn and via email—politely, professionally, and with purpose.
  • I refined my branding, designed my own banner, and learned things like conversion paths, alt text, and font pairings I never thought I’d need as an editor.

Some days felt like progress. Other days felt like I was talking to an empty room. But I’m here, showing up—even when the inbox is quiet.

Because someone will read this post. Someone will see the care I take with every comma, every cadence. And when that first client comes through, they'll know I climbed every step of this staircase to meet them—with clarity, integrity, and an unswerving red pen.

Yvonne Smith is the founder of Second Sight Editing, where she combines editorial precision with a deep respect for authorial voice. When she’s not fine-tuning manuscripts or decoding CMOS, she’s building her business one bold step at a time. Learn more at Second Sight | Home.

Tags:  #CopyeditorJourney  #Editorial Reflections  #FreelancerLife  #PublishingInsights  #RealTalk 

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