Pretty much everyone who writes a lot develops little tics--patterns you fall into when you're being lazy or just not thinking. Ideally, you realize what your tics are and try to avoid them when possible.
And if you don't? Well, you end up like Herald columnist Joe Fitzgerald--who, according to Boston magazine's Joe Keohane, has a troubling tendency toward hero worship.
Explains Keohane, writing on BoMag's
shiny new blog:
Fitz’s column yesterday—titled "The counsel of heroes stays with you for a lifetime"—did it again. We thought this called for a two-year retrospective. Here then, is Fitz’s Hall of Heroes:8/20/05: “Millie was a hero to a lot of people.”
9/7/05: “Tom Reilly has a chance to be a hero to a
lot of disenfranchised people, and all it would require is for him to
do the right thing.”
10/8/2005: “More than a few of them, he was told,
came to regard him as a personal hero. ‘It’s interesting you use the
word hero,’ he said. ‘I believe one of the things young people still
need is heroes, and frankly I’m not sure some of the heroes they’re
looking at today are going to be the true heroes of their future, the
ones they’re going to want to thank when they look back years from
now.’”
12/7/05: “Two Boston homicide detectives had called
on his behalf, asking if he could meet his hero, Reggie Lewis, the late
Celtics star.”
1/16/06: “If you want a crash course in what made [ML] King a personal hero at this address, read Taylor Branch’s ‘Parting The Waters,’ a breathtaking biography.”
1/23/06: “That column was followed by a piece on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., a personal hero at this address.”...
If you're a Joe Fitz connisseur, Keohane provides many, many more examples.