Every time we embark on a story, we are diving into moments—a
series of moments, actually—that take place in the lives of our characters.
We may not know what’s happening in their lives any more than
they do, but we join them in the unknowing and must be willing to follow them
wherever they take us in the hope their path will lead us into a story.
Each moment of their lives can give us another clue to who
they are and who they want to be, as well as clues to who they may be running
from or trying to escape.
If we dive deep enough into these moments, we can discover
the secrets that our characters are holding close to their hearts, their
dreams, their hopes, and their fears.
We can learn how these secrets help them form their decisions,
and how these decisions lead them to take the steps that they take in their
lives.
We may make lists and outlines and plot notes, but, like our
characters, we don’t always have a clue about where to go or what happens next.
We have to learn to immerse ourselves in the moments of
their lives and be willing to sit and wait and listen, and then to follow them
wherever they may take us, even if, as Vonnegut suggests, it’s just to get a
glass of water.
It takes a special skill—let’s call it improvisation at its
highest—to succeed in moving fully into each moment, to move through another
person’s world and respond to events in that world as they occur in the moment.
What is your character
feeling now? And now? These are questions that Carolyn Coman suggests that
we ask as we follow our characters. (She offered these questions in a lecture
on the craft of writing that she gave at Vermont College of Fine Arts more than
fifteen years ago, but I still remember them.)
In each moment, we need to remember to ask these questions.
And we need to understand how these feelings compel our
characters to act.
We can spend days writing down images that come into our
mind as our characters move haphazardly through their lives and as we try to
keep up with their ever-shifting desires and fears and hopes.
It isn’t necessary to record every moment of our characters’
lives, only the moments that propel the story forward, moments linked in a
chain of cause-and-effect that bring us from the start of the story to its conclusion.
Between the beginning and the end are the moments that exist
in our characters’ lives. In order to write about them, we need to become part
of each moment—feeling what our characters want, understanding how our
characters think—so that we can record their stories with honesty and truth.
For more on improvisation in writing and staying in the
moment, visit:
4 comments:
Bookmarking this and printing it out as well.
Thanks, Kelly. Can't want to see what you'll discover!
Very nice, Bruce. I call it "magic" because it certainly is. You (writer) have a certain intention to write this or that, but when you actually move your fingers over the keyboard, those dang characters let you know what's really going on. Magic. There is no other word for it. The gifts we are all given simply by being human are amazing, amazing, amazing. Lucky are those with the awareness to enjoy them. Man on man.
How I love that magic! The intention, as you point out, is what moves us to the keyboard, but once our fingers start moving, we never know where that magic will take us. Thanks, Sandy, for sharing your wonderful "magic" with us (and with all your many devoted readers!).
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