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Stories
and Feelings |
by:
Bill
Johnson |
Many
stories are a journey of feeling for a story's
audience. As characters overcome or pass
through various obstacles to get what they
want, they pass through stages of feeling,
and readers who identify with these characters
or become invested in what happens to them,
share these feelings.
This makes a story different than real life,
where many people struggle to access their
true feelings, feel a need to take drugs
to mute or control their feelings, or feel
unable to express or experience feelings.
Some writers struggle with writing about
feelings because they tend to be thoughtful
and reflective, waiting until after an experience
to process their feelings. Writers who deal
with their feelings with detached reflection
tend to create story characters who deal
with their feelings with detached reflection,
often off-stage and out of sight of a story's
audience. The story's audience gets an objective
report about a character's feelings, but
does not get to share those feelings in
their most immediate and potent form.
The very creative process that helps fuel
storytelling, thoughtful reflection and
an ability to visualize the creation of
a story world, lends itself to storytelling
being an objective process (watch the movie
in your head and write down the details).
The trap for some writers is that when they
draw on their own experiences from life
to create objective portraits of characters,
they experience these objective portraits
subjectively. Think of this in the context
of someone else's home movies. To you that
collection of stills of a Hawaii vacation
might include some great shots of beaches
but, since you aren't on them, so what?
But, to the creators of these home movies,
each picture helps them relive, re-feel,
the experience.
It's the job of the storyteller to help
his or her audience experience that beach
in Hawaii, what it feels like, and to suggest
a story-like purpose to being on that beach
(that something is in need of resolution
and fulfillment).
I'm not suggesting there isn't a place and
purpose for objective writing. Hemmingway,
for example, appears to be writing in an
objective fashion, but he is always direct
and immediate about creating a subtext for
what the action of a story means, both to
a character and to a story's audience.
Writing feelings that connect with actions
and suggest a dramatic purpose is a skill
that some writers need to study and learn.
About the author:
Bill Johnson is author of A Story is a Promise
(http://www.storyispromise) and office manager
of Willamette Writers (http://www.willamettewriters.com).
Circulated by Bandoni
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