1. GoldenGhost

    GoldenGhost Senior Member

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    Writing Outside of Yourself: Thoughts On Speculative Empathy

    Discussion in 'Plot Development' started by GoldenGhost, Jun 16, 2013.

    So, you’ve decided to put on the armor of imagination, have you? To wield the pen? To battle the white page and all its opposing, blank-faced forces?

    Well for what it’s worth, I’m inclined to say you’ve chosen one of the most enlightening crafts because writing deals with life and all its richness. Most importantly, it requires an emotional understanding of the life you’ll be attempting to imitate and animate, which means you must cultivate and nourish your ability to empathize through reading and observation. Both acts will reward you with bountiful insights into the minds of your fellow people and their behaviors. By seeing characters, or people, in action, you’ll then be able to vivify your own, making them so real, even you will marvel at the shape they’ll take on the page.

    A mantra of four words floats around many writing circles. Some of you may be familiar with them, or have heard your English teacher shouting his praise of them to the heavens as if it were a decree from the gods.

    “Write what you know.”

    While the advice is sound, it’s widely misinterpreted by novices, like myself. It implies a need to know your material, and that if you have any doubts regarding your understanding of the content you’ve chosen for a piece, you should shy away from writing it, entirely.

    Sure, it has its merits. It allows a writer to stay within their comfort zone, to pull directly from experience and use it as foundation, building your story from there, the operative word being “experience.”

    I can already hear the words of agreement and the questions. How can someone expect to write a character who has lost their mother, when the writer has not lost a mother? The writer has no idea what it’s like to lose a mother, let alone a parent. How the hell could the writer expect to make that character real? The author might run the risk of writing inaccurate reactions, incorrect emotions, and false dialogue.

    Wrong.

    Though it’s a “safe” way of writing, it’s probably one of the most limiting approaches to creating a story, because you severely stifle your ability to explore, to use something I refer to as: speculative empathy.

    Experience is, without a doubt, one of the necessary things to have, when creating anything. But there will come a point where your own experience only goes so far and you’ll then have to use it as reference point, a sort of platform from which you’ll take a leap of faith----and speculate----based on your own intimate experience with similar emotions.

    Using the previous example of the character who has lost a mother, let’s take a brief walk through the door of speculative empathy, and what it will bring to your writing.

    Think for a moment. If you’ve never lost a parent, ask yourself a few questions. Have you lost a grandparent? A close friend? Do you have any friends who have lost either? Do you know anyone who has lost someone close to them?

    Someone you’ve seen or known has experienced death and all its sadness, knows all too well the veil of grief. If you do not know someone, however, fear not. Look to the stories that have already come before you, written by the masters, and read how they’ve characterized people within such situations.

    Now, if you do know someone, look at what they went through emotionally. If you can, ask them questions, as long as they are comfortable with talking about it. Or if you’ve lost someone yourself, take a close and honest look at your own experience. The truth is that loss, sadness, grief, on a basic level, is the same, no matter who you are, no matter whom you’ve lost. Sugar comes in many forms, though it tastes no less sweet. Do you think Kafka knew what it was like to transform into a cockroach? Did Bradbury know what it was like to live on Mars? Or what about Saramago? Did he know what it was really like to be blind? Of course not! But they all knew about certain emotions that are excited by similar situations, and they also observed those same emotions in others, then used them to their advantage. They speculated.

    By using the information gathered through others, or from the ups and downs you went through during your own period of grief, you can reach outside of yourself and explore other people, which is what writing is all about----embodying the minds of others and living through their eyes. All you have to do is use what you know as the foundation, and then speculate as to how another person might act or feel, building that speculation around your own emotional experience.

    Speculative empathy will open up an entire realm of characters, experiences, and ideas for fresh and original stories. It will strengthen your ability to understand, because you’re making an attempt to comprehend another person, to feel how they feel, to see what they see, to taste what they taste, and to hear what they hear. If writers were only allowed to write on the experiences they themselves have acquired, they’d either have to be immortal, or widely-cultured, with the ability to travel and do all kinds of things that are costly and time-consuming, both of which are impossible. Besides, everything you need is already around you.

    So go out and take that risk, speculate and use your own experience to guess accurately. Use it to explore life and all its richness. Go be something you’re not and take pride in the fact that you’re quietly learning more about your peers, paving the way for a much deeper understanding of mankind, all the while.
     
    den_7, kxylx, Boger and 9 others like this.
  2. Robert J Horner

    Robert J Horner New Member

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    Thank You, that is one of the mental battles I have with writing block.
     
    BeckyJean and GoldenGhost like this.
  3. GoldenGhost

    GoldenGhost Senior Member

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    No problem! Thank you for taking the time to read.
     
  4. mdh

    mdh Member

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    I like what you have to say about speculative empathy. It's such a useful tool for character development. Thank you for your thoughtful article.
     
    GoldenGhost likes this.
  5. joncairns

    joncairns New Member

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    Sound advice thank you,as I am just starting out on my creative writing journey I all take on board all of your recommendations.Than you very much for sharing your thoughts on character development.
    Jon
     
  6. MaryMO

    MaryMO New Member

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    I absolutely love this article. My novel requires more than mediocre knowledge on geography. I on the other hand barely passed that class in high school. Now I research to make sure what I'm writing is accurate, since it's based on our world. Thank you!
     
  7. Jordan J

    Jordan J Member

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    Such clever points. I find the "write what you know" advice so unhelpful and this article clarifies the creative process so well.
     
  8. qwertyportne

    qwertyportne Member

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    Excellent observation. Yes, and when I write outside the "box" of own experiences, it's as if the characters are telling me who they are. The first few times that happened, I found myself talking back to them, saying, "Who the heck do you think is in charge here?" And they said, "We are."

    Empathy is one key, but I'm sure there are others. Perhaps all the keys to getting outside our own experiences are actually inside us. We all share a rich set of fundamental archetypes running around inside our heads. Reminds me of something Sam Keene wrote many years ago:

    "Few of us know the fantastic characters, emotions, perceptions and demons that inhabit the theaters that are our minds. We are content to tell a single story, to construct a consistent character, to fix our identity. We are thus defined more by neglected possibilities than by realized ones. We rehearse and repeat a monotonous monologue while heroes and villains, saints and madmen, ascetics and libertines wait in the wings for a chance to seize the stage and run wild. Be all those characters who wander around in your head. Discover your many selves. You become authentically public only by going to the depths of your private." ~ Sam Keene
     
  9. S Barnwell

    S Barnwell Member

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    Thanks, that's been really helpful and encouraging. I've actually made my main character a teacher (as I am a teacher myself) and using the idea of 'write what you know' does make it easier. It almost flows better - somehow.
    The only thing I would ask, is how do I know I'm not using too many 'buzz words' or acronyms that people who are not in the same occupation aren't perhaps as accepting of or comfortable with?
     
  10. Illandrius

    Illandrius Member

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    I'm still very new to the creative writing process but the first character I ever created, a half-elf fantasy character, lost both his parents and his younger brother all in the same day. I'm unaware of the actual emotions involved in this situation. What I did was see the emotions that I currently feel for these people and what they mean to me in my life and try to imagine what it would be like if that was all gone. What would I feel if I was that person? What would I do if they were taken from me? Where would I go? How would I cope? It's hard and unpleasant to think about but so helpful to get some insight. I really think this post is fantastic. Just wanted to add some personal experience. Thanks for writing this. :)
     

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