Posts Tagged exercise

Nods, Frowns, and Laughs, Oh My!

Flat Will visits me from Santa Fe

Do your characters lack dimension? Are they flat on the page simply nodding, frowning, laughing, smiling every other line? How do you break out of that rut and create a whole, round, believable character? Here are some ideas:

1.) Glean for notes.

  • Armed with a notepad and/or index cards, visit your local library and pull a collection of books off the shelves.
  • Skim the books and jot down any descriptors that catch your eye.
    • Be sure to write down the bibliography for future reference. Your goal is to spark your imagination, not plagiarize.
      • Index cards work exceptionally well for this exercise, the bibliography can be written on the back (or a color code for more than one notation, done with a simple swipe of a highlighter, corresponding to the bibliography card makes it quick and easy) and once through, you can file the cards for future reference.

Helpful Hint: When filing cards, group them by the action, such as nod, frown, smile, laugh. Or emotion: sad, angry, anxious.

  • Once you’ve finished gleaning for ideas, set aside the books, grab up your notepad and entertain a free-write session.
  • For example, in Sandra Brown’s book, Exclusive, she uses the word term “whey-faced” instead of saying ghostly or the color drained out of her face, etc. Whey which happens to be the milky substance typically accompanying the curds in cottage cheese (eating her curds and whey ring a bell?). While this isn’t necessarily unique to Brown, as it came to use in English literature before 1822 (source), it is a very different whey, er way, of saying it in modern literature. During your free write session in this example, come up with some unique phrases that boil down to a bloodless, pale face.
  • Create index cards with your own unique terms and phrases and file them accordingly.
  • Refer to your unique terms when you are writing.

2.) Use a synonym reference site, such as this one: [The Emotions Thesaurus]

3.) People watch.

When people watching, change up your location as much as possible. While studying human interaction at a park is good, ask yourself how often your characters are going to be hanging out at a park in your story. Look for places that would most mirror those visited by your characters whenever possible. And no, we’re not promoting hanging out at the jail.

  • library
  • school drop-off zone (just be careful that you’re not seen as someone those soccer moms are wary of)
  • shopping mall
  • food court at a shopping mall
  • bar/restaurant
  • play/movies/theater
  • business meeting
  • hotel lobby
  • auto dealership (this is often fun)
  • car repair shop
  • coffee house
  • pizza parlor
  • college campus
  • the list is endless

Better yet, eavesdrop. Can you tell from a distance whether two people deeply engaged in a conversation are angry, impassioned, head over heels in love, discussing their autistic child? Compare and contrast what you observe from a distance to what you overhear as you move in to eavesdrop. What clues were accurate? Why? What was deceiving? How was a clue misinterpreted?

For anyone who writes using red herrings, looking for those differences in perception versus reality are vital, by observing these seemingly minor idiosyncrasies you as a writer can use them to your full advantage by leaving clues for your reader that might lead them on a wild goose chase, then bring it around full circle for the explosive gotcha moment in your novel.

Be sure to come armed with your writing tools whether that would be a camera, camcorder, tape recorder or simple notepad and pen. Take time to write down bits of conversation, everything you observe so that when you are working a similar scene into your novel, you can recall the scene down to those subtle nuances you’ve observed and work them in.

4.) Subscribe to a word of the day/week site and have new words delivered directly to your inbox. Even UrbanDictionary.com is a excellent site to add to your repertoire! As new words come in, learn them, the correct way to use them, and practice them until it becomes rote. You will most likely find these new words flow easily once you become familiar enough with them, thus incorporating a new style, a new zest (think lemon pepper) into your writing.

Note: It’s easy to fall back on using a Thesaurus for finding alternative words to plug in. Use caution as while some words don’t always have the same implied meaning. Become well practiced with the proper usage of any new or different word.

5.) Engage in writing exercises regularly using specific writing prompts and exercises that are created expressly to help the writer hone the craft of creating a three-dimensional character, one that is trusted and believable by your reader.

6.) Name that emotion exercises are great. Take any grade school beginning writer handout (here’s one you can use: [PDF file - opens in new window] ) and write for fifteen minutes describing that particular emotion. It doesn’t have to be perfect, in fact it can be pure unadulterated crap. But stick with it. Your goal is to write so descriptively that someone who is visually impaired could picture the emotion in their head.

7.) Picture search. Hit up an online repository of searchable tagged images, such as Flickr. Type in the emotion you are wanting to describe, such as anger. Sift through the pictures and look for the one that you’d most like your reader to see. Now set your timer and write and see what comes of the exercise.

EXAMPLES: [From Flickr]

Angry Mean Face Feel blue Estatic Child in Chinatown Wary

8.) Gesturing is another aspect of describing an underlying emotion, of setting a scene, developing character, and character interaction. Does your main character shrug his shoulders too much? Does your heroine purse her lips frequently, maybe chew on her lower lip until your reader is setting aside the book and hunting down some Chapstick? Again, as you’re looking for descriptors that best convey to your reader a hidden emotion, be sure to include gestures, nervous habits, a touch that might help draw not just your characters together, but pull your reader into the moment.

Practice makes perfect, so as always, write on!

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Physical Description of Setting Exercise

Try describing a room from three perspectives: through the door, looking in; from inside the room for the very first time, and then from the perspective of being an active participant in the room’s use on a regular basis, maybe focusing on a couple particular elements within the room. 

Next, interject a character at the three different points. 

How does the room’s view change the character?  The mood?  Does it affect the relationship between the character and the reader?  If so, in what way?

Exploring these aspects will help you, the writer, engage or disengage your reader as you so desire.  This is a useful tool to learn and master!

Good luck and, as always, write on!

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Writing Prompt: The Snooping Neighbor

Write about a situation in which an obstacle causes problems for this character:

Character: Daisy Swiss
Obstacle: A snooping neighbor

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More Writing Exercise Gone Wrong

Here are some more "Why Did The Chicken Cross the Street" answers submitted by Playwright Anne Wycoff who notes she’s merely rearranged the true words of these famous people. 

Shakespeare:
To cross, or not to cross, that is the question;
Whether ’tis nobler in the mind to stay
The smash and squish of outrageous traffic,
Or to take wings against a road of cars,
And by opposing, cross them.

Robert Burns:
The best laid schemes of chickens an’ cars
Often go awry.

Carman Bliss:
Set me the road to cross, in which I can put my wing,
my beak, my claw, of my very self, 
and it is a road to cross no longer, it is joy;
It is roadkill. And It is the reason why I cross the road.

Mark Twain:
The miracle, or the power, that elevates the few brave chickens to cross the road, is to be found in their egg laying, flight and stupidity under the promptings of a winged, driven spirit.

That, and the fact that their brains are the size of my pinky finger nail, will ensure their unfortunate demise.

Louisa May Alcott:
As a chicken, I am no longer afraid of roads, for I am learning how to drive a car and join my brothers in quest of becoming Foster Farms chickens.

Henry David Thoreau:
Cowardly chickens suffer the desire to cross, heroic chickens, though some be dead, enjoy the thrill of crossing the road of life.

Toni Morrison:
Birth, life and death:  Each took place on the hidden side of the road as an egg, a chick and an unfortunate encounter with a Harley Davidson.

Edgar Allan Poe:
Deep into the dark road peering, long I clucked there, wondering, fearing, doubting, dreaming dreams no chicken ever dared dream before.

Pearl S. Buck:
None who have always been on the other side the road, can understand the terrible, facinating power of the hope of crossing the road to those who are on the  wrong side of the road.

Mahatma Ghandhi:
The difference between crossing the road and being capable of crossing the road would suffice to solve most of the  chicken coups problems.

Erma Bombeck:
What’s wrong with you chickens?  Would you stop laying eggs if you realized that you have wings?  You don’t have to cross the road.  You can fly over it!

Anne Wycoff:
We are always trying to cross the damn road and not appreciate the side of the road we are on.

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Character Development: Writing Exercise

Create a list of people and then add an adjective.  You might have woman, man, child and then adding the adjective have: sleazy man, woeful child, lunatic woman.  Try on professions for size: timid garbage man, boastful weight lifter, etc.  Once you have a list (keep it for future reference) pick two characters and decide what one wants from the other. 

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Writing Prompt

According to Dictionary.com’s “Word of the Day” sentient\SEN-shee-uhnt; -tee-; -shuhnt\, is an adjective:

1. Capable of perceiving by the senses; conscious.
2. Experiencing sensation or feeling.

  • I can remember very vividly the first time I became aware of my
    existence; how for the first time I realised that I was a
    sentient human being in a perceptible world.
    – Lord Berners, First Childhood
  • Answers to such profound questions as whether we are the only
    sentient beings in the universe, whether life is the product of
    random accident or deeply rooted law, and whether there may be
    some sort of ultimate meaning to our existence, hinge on what
    science can reveal about the formation of life.
    – Paul Davies, The Fifth Miracle

As writers, we are very well aware of, or at least strive to be, our characters’ ability to sense things. We wish to find a way to write this in a way that evokes the feeling from our audience.

Exercise: Pick an object from your past that evokes a memory. Spend five minutes examining the object focusing on the emotions that are evoked through your senses.

Write three paragraphs, each paragraph using a different sense, describing the object. Your goal is to detail the object without telling what it is, but in a way that your audience shares the emotions or even your memories.

Write on!

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Air Travel: Unlikely Seatmates

From the book: Everyday Creative Writing by Michael C. Smith and Suzanne Greenberg

Instead of people occupying seats, imagine unlikely things. For example, “on my flight to Honolulu I sat next to a gall bladder.” Or, “In each seat, a different flower. I shared a chair arm with a begonia.” To come up with your own unlikely items, try creating a word string using the word airplane as your starting point. Describe scenes in which these things make demands of flight attendants and express their own unique air travel fears—for example, “Every seat was occupied by a megaphone, and each megaphone was demanding comfort.” Invent dialogues you might have with these unlikely seatmates (what do you say to a fruit basket wearing glasses and reading Fruits magazine?), or write about the fears and demands these things might have.

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Modern Romance

From the book: Everyday Creative Writing by Michael C. Smith and Suzanne Greenberg

1. Write a personal ad in which you describe all of your most unattractive qualities. Be as specific as possible and brutally honest. Celebrate your unique flaws and dislikes, (This ad may also be written in the form of a poem.) Some codes to help you get started: S= single, M =married, G = gay, W = white, B = black, J =Jewish, D = divorced, Bi = bisexual, ISO = in search of.

2. Who would respond to your ad? Create a character who would be attracted to the “flawed” you, and have him or her write a letter back explaining why the two of you should meet for a date. Similar to the ad itself, this response may also be written in the form of a poem.

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