I’ve been asked, “Where do your characters come from?” Easy, I draw from three sources; people I
know, people I’ve read or heard about, and people I imagine or create.
Whether we admit it or not, our character’s emotions come from
within us. I’ve never been attacked and
almost killed, but when my heroine is in this position – I draw from memories
of my most extreme fear. Like when I was
ten and a man of around twenty-eight asked me to play mommy and daddy with
him. I remember my skin turned clammy,
my heart pounded because it felt ‘wrong,’ and my throat became dry. I wanted to
run but my feet refused to move. We were
in the back of an old, smelly, iced delivery truck – and I couldn’t remember
how we got there. Fear gripped me. (Yes
– that truly happened. I remember
saying, “Let me come inside and be happy to find you here.” He agreed, so once I stepped outside, I ran
like hell! I told on him, and never saw
him again. Thank God! Okay – there was more to it than that, but I
escaped – unhurt - that’s all that matters.
But, you see my point. We pull on
our experiences to create the scene.
If my heroine is in an extremely embarrassing position – I draw
on the time I was crossing the street in a wind storm and my dress was lifted
up over my head like a closing tulip.
Even though the scenes are different, the instinct, the feeling, the
‘emotions’ can be drawn from your own inner experiences, and from those we are
close to.
It would be difficult to create a protagonist based on yourself,
because it would be so hard to be objective.
Don’t get too close to the characters you create. Create your villains from people you dislike
and wish you could change, but you know you can’t. Your objectivity will be honest if you pull
from your life situations or altercations, but make it happen to someone other
than yourself.
Also remember it’s those around us… their personalities - good
and bad traits - that we draw on to create characters, but mix them up. If your character is grumpy, self-centered, and
antisocial like Aunt Lottie, you don’t want to hurt her feelings by making her
recognizable – do you? Take Aunt
Lottie’s self-centered persona and mix her with Grandma Anna’s unforgiving,
grudge-holding attitude, and cousin Camille’s sense of humor. Blending family traits guarantees your family
and friends are less likely to recognize themselves and become upset.
Your task is to look hard at each character and decide if he/she
is strong enough to sustain a story.
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