It behaves!
Jun. 26th, 2006 04:45 pmWell, I wasn’t expecting it, but it appears I have finally beaten this story into submission. It still wants to be part of Black Fiddle but it’s willing to let me write it as a short story first, just to test that it works. I definitely think it will be a great addition to Black Fiddle but it seems to have gathered some characters of its own who aren’t in that manuscript. It also has guest appearances from some characters who are in Black Fiddle and I’m delighted by their interaction. You never really see them interact with each other in Black Fiddle and even though I created them, they’ve surprised me with some aspects of their relationship.
So, while I’m still being dictated to by a story - a story that hasn’t even been written yet, no less - at least I can delude myself with the belief that it’s now doing what I wanted it to do in the first place. And yet, I still have the feeling that I’m being bossed around.
But this leads me to a question: does anyone else talk out details of their stories to thin air? Or is that just me? Because I was carrying on a quite detailed conversation with absolutely nobody the other night, talking over some of the details and the rules of the characters in this story. I always find it to be a very beneficial experience - concepts and ideas appear where nothing existed before and characters’ motivations become clearer. On the down side, I probably look like a bit of a nut; sitting there, carrying on a conversation under my breath.
At one point, I found myself involved in a rather intense scene with one of the characters and it was just so good that I had to go and fetch a notebook so I could write the details down.
But, as I said, I must look like a total freak and I was just hoping I wasn’t alone in behaving like this. Usually, I find myself talking to one of the characters or an outsider who’s observing the behaviour of the people in the story. As a result of this, I now have quite a few notes and plenty of fascinating facts about this story of mine... and I wouldn’t have them if I didn’t have this strange habit.
Is it just me? Or should I be joining the club for People Who Have Conversations With Imaginary Characters? If it is just me, then how does everyone else develop a story before they start writing it? I’d certainly be keen to hear any concepts that don’t involve sitting around like a loon, talking under my breath to someone who isn’t there...
So, while I’m still being dictated to by a story - a story that hasn’t even been written yet, no less - at least I can delude myself with the belief that it’s now doing what I wanted it to do in the first place. And yet, I still have the feeling that I’m being bossed around.
But this leads me to a question: does anyone else talk out details of their stories to thin air? Or is that just me? Because I was carrying on a quite detailed conversation with absolutely nobody the other night, talking over some of the details and the rules of the characters in this story. I always find it to be a very beneficial experience - concepts and ideas appear where nothing existed before and characters’ motivations become clearer. On the down side, I probably look like a bit of a nut; sitting there, carrying on a conversation under my breath.
At one point, I found myself involved in a rather intense scene with one of the characters and it was just so good that I had to go and fetch a notebook so I could write the details down.
But, as I said, I must look like a total freak and I was just hoping I wasn’t alone in behaving like this. Usually, I find myself talking to one of the characters or an outsider who’s observing the behaviour of the people in the story. As a result of this, I now have quite a few notes and plenty of fascinating facts about this story of mine... and I wouldn’t have them if I didn’t have this strange habit.
Is it just me? Or should I be joining the club for People Who Have Conversations With Imaginary Characters? If it is just me, then how does everyone else develop a story before they start writing it? I’d certainly be keen to hear any concepts that don’t involve sitting around like a loon, talking under my breath to someone who isn’t there...
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on 2006-06-26 06:51 am (UTC)I don't frequently talk to myself about stories out loud, but I do laugh at funny things my characters do, or frown when they misbehave--and my family thinks that's rather weird enough!
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on 2006-06-26 06:58 am (UTC)Though it does make me laugh. I'm almost always laughing over nothing, and that gets a lot of looks. Or grinning like a maniac. It's usually the insane characters that hang about more. I had one who could help but make horrible comments about people. She was great fun.
but anyway, yes, i do talk to characters. Though i know they're characters. I think it gets scary when you start thinking they're real people... i wrote a story once about a character who talked to her writing characters, fully knowing they weren't real, yet wishing heartily that they were. That was a fun story, i just got bored of it.
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on 2006-06-26 07:02 am (UTC)And may I say that I find your icon decidedly plendiferous.
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on 2006-06-26 07:32 am (UTC)I think Dad thought I was strange the other night though when I was writing Bronte LorF in that when I wanted to work out a reaction I'd sit there staring straight ahead (and the monito is on an engle to me, so I was in fact staring at the wall) and then go back to typing again. :D
Cat
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on 2006-06-26 07:43 am (UTC)Works with dialogue in stories too. Getting someone to say it to you and you being the character. (Or, if you're multi-talented and don't have too many characters in the scene to juggle at once, saying it to yourself and then switching and saying the next bit back)
So, that's kind of like carrying out conversations with yourself...
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on 2006-06-26 07:55 am (UTC)no subject
on 2006-06-26 09:15 am (UTC)no subject
on 2006-06-26 09:16 am (UTC)I'm glad you like the icon! It suddenly occurred to me that I didn't have a "Huzzah!" icon, so I made one to rectify that absence.
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on 2006-06-26 09:17 am (UTC)Random person: "Why are you... talking under your breath to the wall?"
Me: "I'm being artistic!"
It does help, so I suppose I should just accept it as part of the creative process.
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on 2006-06-26 09:19 am (UTC)no subject
on 2006-06-26 09:22 am (UTC)I like the sound of that story. I think all of us writers out there would like at least one or two of their characters to be real people.
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on 2006-06-26 09:34 am (UTC)BH: Hey, have you seen my-
Bun: Shh, can't you see we're in the middle of a conversation?
BH: *looks around* ... *backs out of room slowly*
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on 2006-06-26 09:53 am (UTC)The way I work out my stories is I just sit there and think. I think it out. Once I've got a sentence or two I like, I write them down, and then fom there I write down the next logical sentence, and then the next one. I wouldn't call that when stories write themselves though, cos this is effort, trying to pick the right words and stick them in the right order etc.
I've never really thought about the way I write before. I just think of something and then write it down. My brain goes "and then she should sneak into her best friends bedroom in the middle of the night, after all, he's the only one who believes her" when I didn't even know she had a best friend. My brain just decides "you will write this" and I go "dude, I am such a good writer I have the coolest ideas" etc.
-end of ramble-
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on 2006-06-26 10:10 am (UTC)It's a bit weird to think about how we write, isn't it? It can be such a bizarre process at times.
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on 2006-06-26 10:47 am (UTC)no subject
on 2006-06-26 11:55 am (UTC)Welcome to the Conversations With Fictional Characters Club, Evil Twin. Your t-shirt will arrive soon.
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on 2006-06-26 12:37 pm (UTC)no subject
on 2006-06-26 03:18 pm (UTC)no subject
on 2006-06-26 03:41 pm (UTC):)
I know, it seems rather inane to people who aren't writers, I always get strange looks from them when I try to explain what my shirt means. As of late my muses have realized I've been to busy with other things to pay much attention to them. But when things start to lag I often find my attention being distracted by one or another of them, and sometimes it's in a fashion that is completely inapplicable to their story. Just randomness about their backstory or something else. Not useless, really, as it helps me get to know them better. And I get the same sorts of seemingly random expressions on my face when reacting to their story as I write or while I'm just sittin there while they're talking to me. I often wonder how it looks to other people, but I've never dared to ask. Mister knows me well, knows the nature of my muses, and knows not to comment about that sort of thing. He realizes its just the way I am, and that it might upset me if 1) he distracts me and interrupts or 2) says something that might inadvertently question my sanity. *rotfl* I tell him I'm not sane enough as it is. heh.
Sanity is such a fluid definition. The great artists were always, by today's standards, more insane than socially acceptable. So I don't let it bother me too much. It's just who I am. And it's also why I tend to be rather relunctant to talk. I don't want to frighten anyone. *lmao*
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on 2006-06-26 03:44 pm (UTC)no subject
on 2006-06-26 07:45 pm (UTC)So at least you're still actually yourself when you're doing it. ^_^
I also give myself a lot of dopey looks in the mirror when I'm trying to write, because I can never figure out how to describe facial expressions. So I have to make them and then try to describe what I see.
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on 2006-06-26 08:38 pm (UTC)no subject
on 2006-06-27 04:51 am (UTC)no subject
on 2006-06-27 11:41 pm (UTC)no subject
on 2006-06-27 11:42 pm (UTC)no subject
on 2006-06-27 11:43 pm (UTC)If I do this sort of thing in public, I think I internalise it much more and just let the conversation play out in my head. Of course, this doesn't prevent me from making faces from time to time and probably looking quite odd.
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on 2006-06-27 11:43 pm (UTC)no subject
on 2006-06-27 11:44 pm (UTC)no subject
on 2006-06-27 11:45 pm (UTC)You're right - sanity is not only fluid, but highly overrated. I doubt we'd be finding all of these characters and stories in our heads if we were completely sane. And I think we're better for it, too!
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on 2006-06-27 11:47 pm (UTC)no subject
on 2006-06-28 01:12 am (UTC)