Hazards of the Obsessed Writer!
Hazards of the Possessed Obsessed Writer
1. Interrupting
conversations. Your friend (or daughter) is enjoying a
conversation with you, telling you something important to her or
him. Midstream, you interrupt to say:
“I’m writing a new
story and I’m really feeling the character. Her name is Abby. She has red hair,
because you know red hair is dear to me, and brown eyes, because you know that
I like brown eyes. Anyway, I’m not sure why she would show up at the store when
she’s can't drive.” (Scenario made up since I can't remember any of the real ones.)
Then you recognize
what you’ve done and say, “Oh I didn’t mean to interrupt you. What were you
saying?”
2. Moving cars. Your pumping gas
and James is on your mind. He's been on your mind a lot
lately. No, James isn't a new love interest, but a character in a
short story you are writing. In the middle of watching your money fly out
of your wallet and into the gas tank, you realize that when James lights
something on fire, he uses gasoline to do it. Where did he get the gas?
Then your tank is full and (because you don’t use a debit card) you must
go inside to pay for your purchase. With James still on your mind, you walk toward
the door and in front of a moving pickup truck. The driver slams on his brake. You
smile sheepishly, shrug, then hurry to the door. Later you blame it on James, but really you walk in front of cars all.the.time.
3. While shopping, you see the
girl, and she’s everything you thought she would be. Fifteenish, red
curly hair, pale with bright blue eyes and she’s dressed exactly the right way: cool jeans and a tight t-shirt. It's so perfect you would have thought you picked
out her clothing. You glance to see if her mother is what you imagined her
to be, but the girl seems to be alone. No, you’re not a kidnapper, you’re a
writer. And that girl fits the description of Mona, a main character in
your book draft. The Mona double catches you looking. You smile at her, and
move on—ever so fast.
4. A friend tells you
something
confidential and personal. Immediately, you think, I’m using this in a story.
Then you look into the loving, trustful eyes of your friend and wonder, is she
really that good of a friend? Then you decide (darn it), some things are off
base—or are they?
Comments
Happy week ahead .. cheers Hilary
and thanks for stopping by my broken branch falls blog tour at C. Lee's!