A short peice of fiction...

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Valkrane
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A short peice of fiction...

Post by Valkrane »

Hi all,

I have been writing a lot lately about several characters I've developed over a long time, and their interactions with one another. I guess you would call this a vignette. It's part of a bigger story, a work in progress. I wanted to practice writing in third person omniscient because it's not a POV I have worked with much.

I love a good critique. I would love some feedback on this, even if you think it sucks. Tell me, and tell me why. :)

*********************************************************************

Renee stood with her back to him, pouring water from a pitcher. Her long red hair was down, flowing to her waste. It was that hair that first attracted him. She had come home from work happy today. Just minutes earlier she was laughing, telling him what some old man had said to her.

He stood timidly, on the other side of the kitchen. He knew she didn't have much time before she had to go to work at her other job. As she turned around to face him he became aware of his own anxiety. He had already started to shake. "Renee" he said softly.

"Yea?" she smiled back at him.

"I..." he stumbled over his words for a second, then took a deep breath, "I think we should break up."

Her jaw dropped and the smile that had been on her face was replaced with an expression of bewilderment. She stood perfectly still, holding the glass of water. "Why? What is it now?"

He looked down at the floor, unable to handle the site of her face right now, "It's nothing you did. And it's not that I don't love you." He was choking up, which made it hard to speak. "I just don't want you to suffer anymore."

Her shock was replaced with anger, and her stillness with sudden movement. She sat her glass down on the counter, so hard that water splashed out of it. "I don't fucking believe this." She stormed passed him and down the stairs.

He followed. He didn't see her in the TV room, so he turned sharply into the bedroom, where she was pulling several articles of clothing out of the dresser and tossing them in a laundry basket.

"What are you doing?"

"What's it look like?" she gave a small sarcastic laugh, "I'm packing my shit and getting the hell out of here!"

"Come on Renee', please don't leave like this. I'm doing this for your own good."

"I can't keep doing this Anders. All this fucking drama all the time. And just when I think it's all calmed down you pull something else. Why the hell can't you make up your mind?" As she was speaking she entered the bathroom and came out holding her toothbrush.

"It's not that I can't make up my mind. My mind is made up. I can't keep hurting you." He took a few steps toward her and put his arms loosely around her waist. She noted the pallid look in his blue eyes and wondered if he was thinking straight. "Please don't make this harder than it has to be."

"Get your hands off me!" she snapped, backing up. "You're asking me to not make this harder. Wow..." she shook her head in disbelief and continued adding things to her basket.

She picked up the basket and charged past him, out of their bedroom and back up the stairs.

He followed. "You don't have to leave." he called to her. "I'll leave." When he reached the top of the stairs he saw Tom coming in the door from work. Great, he thought, wondering if Tom was going to ignore this conflict or get in the middle of it. Neither would surprise him.

"You know what kills me about this?" Renee's loud voice interrupted his thought pattern. He didn't say anything. He stood at the top of the stairs waiting for her to finish. She was in front of him now, her green eyes full of fire and tears. "Five fucking years! I supported you when you lost your job. And when you tried yo kill yourself I--" he voice faltered for a second as she choked back a determined sob. She took a deep breath, "When you tried to kill yourself I was at the hospital every fucking day. And now that you've gotten help you're just dumping me!"

He didn't have anything to say for himself. Tears were burning in his own eyes now and all he wanted to do was grab her and hold her. He noticed that Tom had left the room, thankfully.

She picked up the basket of clothes from the chair where she had left it and pushed her way past him, back down the stairs. He followed again. He saw her go into the bedroom. He planned to follow her and try to speak to her rationally. But when he reached the bottom of the stairs she slammed the door shut. He could hear her crying from the other side of the door. He stood for a long moment, staring at the door, thinking what a mess he'd made of things this time.

Eventually he heard muffled speech coming from inside the bedroom. "Hi Brenda, it's Renee." ... "Hey, I'm really sorry to do this to you, but I can't come in tonight." ... "Just some shit at home I have to deal with." ... "You can get someone to cover for me right?" He felt awful. He knew how much she had called off from work when he was in the hospital. She was lucky to have such an understanding boss. "Alright, bye."

He waited a half a minute or so and slowly opened the door.

She was curled up on the bed, her red hair hiding her face like a funeral shroud. He walked across the floor to the bed and touched her hair lightly. "Can we at least talk about this?"

"I can't do this right now." she sniffled, "I'm too upset."

"Do you think this is easy for me?", he said, "I don't want to lose you but I can't handle seeing you suffer anymore."

"That should be my choice, not yours." She was still laying with her back to him, curled up. Her body was shaking.

"Renee, I'm sorry, I--"

"Just get out." she said, "You said I could stay."

He stood up slowly. She didn't turn to face him as he left the room.

He felt nauseous as he left the bedroom and began climbing the stairs. The room seemed to be spinning. There was a trash can that Tom kept at the top of the stairs in the atrium. When he reached the top of the stairs he sat clumsily, grabbed it, and puked in it.

Tom came into the atrium to see what was the matter. He watched, not knowing what to do. He entered the kitchen and grabbed a paper towel. He walked into the atrium and handed it to his friend. Tom had never been good at this sort of thing and had no idea what to say. Finally he spoke, "What'd you do this time?"

Anders looked up at him and rolled his eyes while wiping his mouth. He then stood swiftly and walked out the door, slamming it behind him.

Tom stood for a second, "What the fuck just happened here?" he thought to himself. The smell of vomit hit his nostrils. He immediately opened the door and sat the trash can outside. Anders could take care of it later. It was his mess, after all. And Tom had cleaned up plenty of his messes over the years.



Downstairs Renee was still laying on the bed. The tears had stopped. She tried to convince herself that she'd cried herself dry and wouldn't cry anymore over him. But she knew deep down that wasn't true. She reminded herself that mental illness was not a get out of jail free card. She remembered all the times she defended his strange behavior, because "He can't help it. He's sick."

But, she also helped him through every rough patch over the years. When her thoughts landed on the day he attempted suicide she felt a tug deep within her and her eyes began to burn again. No. She thought, I won't think about that right now.

She stood up and walked into the bathroom. Her face in the mirror was haunting and ominous in the dim light. She flipped on the light and immediately noticed the redness in her eyes, and the stark, dark circles beneath them. Five years, she thought, everything he put her through, for nothing.

She quickly grabbed her brush and ran it through her long red hair. She noticed all the blond hairs entangled in the brush with her own hair. He used this brush also. She turned on the cold water and splashed some on her face, then patted it dry with a towel.

Her cell phone was on the table by the bed. She picked it up and dialed a familiar number. "Hello." the voice on the other end said.

"Hali?" Renee said, "Can you come over."



Anders was two blocks from the house before he even gave a thought to where he was going. Alan's house was the most logical choice, even though Jeff lived closer.

He felt weak and anxious.

He felt in the right pocket of his jeans and was so relieved he had his phone. How awkward would it have been to go back to the house after it? He called Alan. No answer. Figures. But he decided to head to the house anyway in hopes that Alan would be there with his ringer turned off.

The taste of vomit was still lingering in his mouth. He tried not to think about that, among other things.

For the last five years she was one of the few constants in his life. He lost jobs, lost friends, lost any ties with his family, and even lost his sanity. Somehow through it all he kept her. She really did keep him going for a long time. He wondered if she knew how grateful he was... how grateful he would always be.

She slept in the hospital room for five nights in a row when he was in the ICU after his suicide attempt. Unfortunately he was too out of it to notice. Morphine mixed with who really knows what else made those days a haze. He had vague recollections of bright lights, nurses, and pain... but he didn't remember much else.

Then came the psych ward...

He was held there on an involuntary hold. He was considered a threat to himself and to others. He found it mildly amusing... how they could label him a threat while having no idea what he'd been through. All the hallucinations... white dogs, delusions, how did any of that make him a danger? He had never been a violent person.

He was a danger to those around him in other ways. He knew this. The emotional pain he had caused Renee alone could rival anyone in jail for domestic violence. His multiple assaults on her may have never left a single bruise, but the scars would never fully heal.

His phone vibrated suddenly in his pocket, startling him out of his grim thought pattern. It was Alan, "Hello."

"Hey bro, what'd you need?"

He brushed long hair from his face as he spoke, "I need a place to sleep tonight."

"Why? What happened?"

"Renee and I split up."

"Again? Why?"

He took a deep breath, "Because I'm crazy."



Tom heard a car in the driveway, followed by footsteps on the porch and a light knock on the back door. He rounded the corner into the atrium and saw Hali standing outside, a bag in each hand.

"Hey." he said, opening the door.

"Hi." she said, stepping inside. "Is she downstairs?"

"Yeah."

"I got wine, Ben & Jerry's and scary movies." she smiled, holding up both bags.

"I'm sure she'll appreciate that."

"So do you think it's really over this time?"

"Don't know." he said, scratching his head, "I don't know all the details."

"He's a good guy and all, but he's a little bit nuts. Don't you think?"

"Well he can't really help it. No one chooses to be nuts."

"Yea but he keeps choosing to hurt my friend." she roles her eyes. "Maybe it's because he's from Norway and didn't get enough sunlight growing up over there."

"Maybe."

She turned and headed down the stairs.



It was getting dark when Anders got to Alan's place. Alan had a Guinness ready for him when he went inside. "So what happened man?" he asked, concerned.



Hali and Renee had already killed a whole bottle of red Moscato and were on the second bottle. Tom could hear their voices and occasional laughter downstairs in the tv room. He debated on going down there and hanging out with them but figured it was a bad idea. He had to show some level of neutrality here, out of respect. They were both close friends.

He had no idea where Anders was, if he was coming back tonight or coming back at all for that matter. As much as he wanted to be loyal, he couldn't help but feel like a certain darkness and negativity were gone from the house. At least for now.

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Re: A short peice of fiction...

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You're good [thumbup] I feel that you got into some kind of trance after the first 3 paragraphs and starting dialogue? :D

I just wanted to make two remarks, besides the comma which also I don't use as it should be used so I'm not the person for that [grin] First remark would be on the sentence rythm. As this writing frenzy of yours started, you got into the flow. Sentences are perfect. But the beggining sounds like grocery list. It's monotonous and I had to fight hard to concentrate. In my mind it sounds like robot speaking [crazy] Avoid that at all costs. Unless you write fighting scenes where short sentences can give away the feeling of quick reactions and movements.

Personally I would start with "I want to brake up" just to make things interesting [grin]

Also lack of the descriptions of the place around the characters gives focus on their conflict but it leaves a reader confused. Expecially in the situation with Tom. Where he went? Is it a two story building with friends living on each of the floors? Is it apartment house? I kinda got lost there.

Nonetheless, wow. Great, dynamic story. You have fantastic style which gives you the abillity to fuckin' paint wiht words. I'm feeling atmosphere without descriptions of space and that is something you don't want to lose [thumbup] I like how these innner disturbances of people drive the story; at first I thought that someone is a psyhopath but I couldn't decipher who, but then when underlying emotions and memories came into place their actions seem perfectly justified. Great work [yay]

I would like to see the rest of the story if I may [crazy]

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Re: A short peice of fiction...

Post by Valkrane »

EternalReturn wrote: You're good [thumbup] I feel that you got into some kind of trance after the first 3 paragraphs and starting dialogue? :D
Thank you, :) And yea, that"s pretty much what happened.
EternalReturn wrote:I just wanted to make two remarks, besides the comma which also I don't use as it should be used so I'm not the person for that [grin] First remark would be on the sentence rythm. As this writing frenzy of yours started, you got into the flow. Sentences are perfect. But the beggining sounds like grocery list. It's monotonous and I had to fight hard to concentrate. In my mind it sounds like robot speaking [crazy] Avoid that at all costs. Unless you write fighting scenes where short sentences can give away the feeling of quick reactions and movements.
Yea, I agree. It started out pretty choppy. I need to re-write the beginning.
EternalReturn wrote:Personally I would start with "I want to brake up" just to make things interesting [grin]
That might be my solution for the bad writing in the beginning. Thank you for the suggestion. :)
EternalReturn wrote:Also lack of the descriptions of the place around the characters gives focus on their conflict but it leaves a reader confused. Expecially in the situation with Tom. Where he went? Is it a two story building with friends living on each of the floors? Is it apartment house? I kinda got lost there.
I know. I even thought about that as I was writing it. I just wasn't quite sure how to work a description into the story. The layout of the house is based on a friend of mine's house. It's a pretty unique style house. Basically it's a one story house with a really large, furnished basement. And there is an atrium type room off of the kitchen where the back door is. That room is actually where a lot of the story takes place. Basically this is a house where three people live. Anders and Renee live downstairs in the basement and Tom lives upstairs. Idk... this house is so where I envision this taking place. But I wonder if I should change it to a more traditional style house so the reader isn't confused.
EternalReturn wrote:Nonetheless, wow. Great, dynamic story. You have fantastic style which gives you the abillity to fuckin' paint wiht words. I'm feeling atmosphere without descriptions of space and that is something you don't want to lose [thumbup] I like how these innner disturbances of people drive the story; at first I thought that someone is a psyhopath but I couldn't decipher who, but then when underlying emotions and memories came into place their actions seem perfectly justified. Great work [yay]
Thank you so much for the kind words. Painting with words, I like it. :)

I guess all these characters have some mildly psychopathic tenancies. But Anders is the only one out of them all who is presented outright as mentally ill. He kind of represents the part of myself that has been labeled in the past as crazy, I guess.
EternalReturn wrote:I would like to see the rest of the story if I may [crazy]
Sure you can, when I finish it. Maybe I'll just keep posting snippets here as I write them. I like the vibe here and I like the feedback I'm getting so far. I do have one more short scene that is part of the longer story written. I could post that here. :)

Again, thank you so much for replying and for the suggestions and encouragement.

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Re: A short peice of fiction...

Post by Valkrane »

So, this isn't really part of the last story. It relates, but is not directly tied in I guess. Kimberly has her own separate story and this is where her story crosses paths with the other story. The guy sitting in the waiting room is Anders from the first story.

Enjoy, [devil]

*******

"So I'll see you in two weeks, Kimberly." Dr. Schmidt smiled at the adolescent girl, seated across from him in the small office. She was a thin girl with chin length hair, dyed blue-black. She wore all black clothing and black Converse tennis shoes.


"Yea." Kimberly said softly.


"I'll need to talk to your mother for a few minutes before you go."


"Ok." she answered, smiling back at him.


Her mother was outside the door waiting to go in. Kimberly passed without speaking.


The waiting room appeared empty as she exited the long hallway. The receptionist had gone home and an eerie quiet had settled in the office. The she noticed a dark clad man, seated in the corner.


He wore black jeans and a black hooded sweatshirt. The hood was pulled up, slightly concealing his face, but long blond hair spilled from beneath it like a golden waterfall. She could not see his eyes but wondered for a second if he was asleep. He sat so perfectly still, his head tilted down.


One of Kimberly's favorite things to do was make up stories. She was told she had a vivid imagination by, well, everyone. She didn't see anything wrong with it, but others did. In the past when she was waiting a long time to see Dr. Schmidt, she would alleviate her boredom by making up stories about the people in the waiting room. There was the grown woman she saw once, who was morbidly obese, with her hair in ratty pigtails, carrying a cabbage patch doll. Kimberly decided she must have killed her husband, but got off on an insanity plea and now thought she was a child. And then there was the man who sat in the office quietly rocking back and forth and holding back his tears. She imagined his wife just left him for another man and he was crushed.


But, most people in this office seemed normal enough. She wondered if anyone sitting there ever made up stories about her while she sat waiting.


But this man seemed different. It would be hard coming up with a story for him. She kept her eyes on him and she made her way to a seat, watching for some sign of life. She sat across from him. As she sat, he lifted his head slightly, and for a split second their eyes met. She almost was startled by the site of his face. His eyes were so strikingly blue, framed by an angelic, handsome face. She stepped back and stared for a second or two, then felt a wave of embarrassment wash over her.


Now that he had seen her she felt like she had to speak. Impulsively she blurted out, "Your hair's really long. Mine used to be that long but my Mom made me get it cut."


He looked at her inquisitively, "That stinks."


His voice was deep, but his way of speech was odd and foreign. "You talk funny." she said quickly, and then put her hand up to her mouth. What was she thinking?


"Yes." he said softly, "I am from another country. I didn't grow up speaking English."


"Where did you grow up?"


"Across the ocean."


"You're really handsome. Does everyone across the ocean look like you?"


Now it seemed he was the embarrassed one. He laughed softly and looked away.


"I'm always afraid of coming here because I'm afraid of being locked up in a home."


"I wouldn't worry about that, " he said, leaning forward a little, "They only lock people up who are dangerous."


"My Mom and my teachers say I have an attitude problem."


"Well I don't see one." He said, giving her the slightest hint at a smile.


She smiled back, flattered and mildly swooning.


"Kimberly!" Her mother"s voice shot off like a canon. She jumped up from the chair. "Let's go."


She turned around and waved while walking away.


"I told you to never talk to anyone in this office didn't I? Why can't you listen?" She hung her head and her face flushed red. She knew the man could hear her mother. She turned around one more time to see him walking toward Dr. Schmidt in the doorway.


As they walked out the door she knew she would probably never see this stranger again.


She sat in the passenger side of her mother's car, watching trees and buildings go by. Suddenly her mother's voice broke the silence, "Kimberly, I don't want you talking to anyone in that office from now on. Some of the people Doctor Schmidt sees are nuts. Now I'm not going to tell you again."


"But he was nice." she pleaded.


"How do you know he wasn't a pedophile?"


"I..." she trailed off, searching for words.


"See. You don't know. He could have kidnapped you and molested you Kim."


"Don't call me Kim. I don't like being called Kim."


"I birthed you. I'll call you what I want." She reached across the seat and patted Kimberly's dyed black hair. "We're going to wash all this color out of your hair this weekend."


Kimberly liked her black hair. Though her mother was furious when she dyed it.


"Twelve is too young to dye your hair. When you're 16 you do what you want with it. You can shave your head for all I care. But now you'll follow my rules."


Kimberly nodded slowly. Frustration building deep within her.


"And no more talking to people in the shrink's office."


She waited a few seconds and then asked the question she had been dying to ask, "Am I nuts?"


Her mother turned her head sharply, with a look in her eyes that could have been surprise or anger, "Why would you think that?"


"Because I see a shrink. And you even said the people Dr. Schmidt sees are nuts."


Her mother took a deep breath, "You're not nuts. You're different. You just need a little help."


She turned her head to look back out the window, tears forming in her eyes. Her thoughts drifted back to the stranger in the office. She wondered why he was there. Was he nuts too?

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Re: A short peice of fiction...

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You don't mean to incorporate her story in the main story? I don't know what is your idea, but it could be interesting to see such character involved somehow. It could give you a great pitch. But that's just like, my opinion [crazy]

And something tickled my funny as I was reading. And it was a description of Anders as having an angelic face.

You have heard of it i presume - show don't tell rule. What you just did is telling. He had an angelic face. But the question remains, what is that angelic face? How does it look? It's better to show in most cases, to describe why he had an angelic face. Was it his pale skin? Was he able to express his energy somehow that gave the notion of comfort? Or lust? Or just plain beauty as his face is symmetric? Did he have squared jaw or oval jaw? Did he smile, or had cold expression? Did it looked like he was hiding something, or just looked plain mysterious?

You can do interesting trick if you focus on the eyes. People don't say in vain that eyes are the gateway to the one's soul. You can give this feeling af angelic presence just by focusing on eyes. Something like this:

"Deep blue eyes shone like a becaon in the darkness. They looked like two sapphires on the plain of white snow, untouched by time. As if they were portals leading to a deep well which guided lost souls to the ethereal plane, hidden deep within him and witouth him. Almost as if he was not the child of this material world. It gave her peace, different than she experienced before."

And I think I did manage to describe the mysteriousness, angelic and calming presence. You decide, I can only see it from subjective viewpoint [grin]

Valkrane wrote:
EternalReturn wrote:Also lack of the descriptions of the place around the characters gives focus on their conflict but it leaves a reader confused. Expecially in the situation with Tom. Where he went? Is it a two story building with friends living on each of the floors? Is it apartment house? I kinda got lost there.
I know. I even thought about that as I was writing it. I just wasn't quite sure how to work a description into the story. The layout of the house is based on a friend of mine's house. It's a pretty unique style house. Basically it's a one story house with a really large, furnished basement. And there is an atrium type room off of the kitchen where the back door is. That room is actually where a lot of the story takes place. Basically this is a house where three people live. Anders and Renee live downstairs in the basement and Tom lives upstairs. Idk... this house is so where I envision this taking place. But I wonder if I should change it to a more traditional style house so the reader isn't confused.

Again, thank you so much for replying and for the suggestions and encouragement.
I would like to advise you not to change the setting. You did a great job creating the atmosphere, and now I know why. Because it is familliar to you. Just add a bit of descriptions now and then that reflect the atmosphere.

I like to divide my stories in parts corresponding with certain emotion. Concerning your story it started with sort of melancholic feeling so you could write something like:

"Rays of sun diffused throught the window giving a cold grey light form. He stood, being hit with it but didn't feel it's warmth. It seemed that his chaos of thought sucked all the warmth from it, and left the room dive in the deep blue color of the walls as all things came to still.

"I want to break up."

This is an example how I would do it. If you'd like you can do something similar but I would like you to find your own style of doing such things [grin]

Just don't change the environment you placed your story in. I have a feeling that it might not resonate with you as strong as it does right now. After all you managed to create atmosphere based on inner turmoils and dialogue, something I have to practice a lot to be able to do. [thumbup]

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Re: A short peice of fiction...

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EternalReturn wrote:You don't mean to incorporate her story in the main story? I don't know what is your idea, but it could be interesting to see such character involved somehow. It could give you a great pitch. But that's just like, my opinion [crazy]

And something tickled my funny as I was reading. And it was a description of Anders as having an angelic face.

You have heard of it i presume - show don't tell rule. What you just did is telling. He had an angelic face. But the question remains, what is that angelic face? How does it look? It's better to show in most cases, to describe why he had an angelic face. Was it his pale skin? Was he able to express his energy somehow that gave the notion of comfort? Or lust? Or just plain beauty as his face is symmetric? Did he have squared jaw or oval jaw? Did he smile, or had cold expression? Did it looked like he was hiding something, or just looked plain mysterious?

You can do interesting trick if you focus on the eyes. People don't say in vain that eyes are the gateway to the one's soul. You can give this feeling af angelic presence just by focusing on eyes. Something like this:

"Deep blue eyes shone like a becaon in the darkness. They looked like two sapphires on the plain of white snow, untouched by time. As if they were portals leading to a deep well which guided lost souls to the ethereal plane, hidden deep within him and witouth him. Almost as if he was not the child of this material world. It gave her peace, different than she experienced before."

And I think I did manage to describe the mysteriousness, angelic and calming presence. You decide, I can only see it from subjective viewpoint [grin]
I agree. Description has never been my strong suit. I either go to one extreme or the other with it. I have always had this problem too. I will either describe something to death or not enough.

You are right. Everyone has a different idea of what is angelic. Hell, if you want to go biblical an angelic face could be the face of a lion, :)

The description you wrote was awesome. You gave me some inspiration. When I describe what he looks like in more detail I will just have to keep in mind that I'm writing from the perspective of a 12 year old girl. And Kimberly doesn't believe in God, so chances are she doesn't believe in Angels either. So really, I need to take an entirely different approach when I describe him.
EternalReturn wrote:I would like to advise you not to change the setting. You did a great job creating the atmosphere, and now I know why. Because it is familliar to you. Just add a bit of descriptions now and then that reflect the atmosphere.

I like to divide my stories in parts corresponding with certain emotion. Concerning your story it started with sort of melancholic feeling so you could write something like:

"Rays of sun diffused throught the window giving a cold grey light form. He stood, being hit with it but didn't feel it's warmth. It seemed that his chaos of thought sucked all the warmth from it, and left the room dive in the deep blue color of the walls as all things came to still.

"I want to break up."

This is an example how I would do it. If you'd like you can do something similar but I would like you to find your own style of doing such things [grin]

Just don't change the environment you placed your story in. I have a feeling that it might not resonate with you as strong as it does right now. After all you managed to create atmosphere based on inner turmoils and dialogue, something I have to practice a lot to be able to do. [thumbup]
Once again, awesome description. I like how you related the description of the room to his mood even if they were in opposition. You've given me plenty of ideas.

In my last response when I said Tom lives "upstairs" what I meant was that he lives on the ground floor of the house. That probably sounded a little confusing.

I am kind of blocked now. I know what happens in the long term but I am not sure what scene I will write next or even if the whole story is interesting enough to hold anyone's attention. But right now I'm having fun writing it so I will keep writing it and see where it ends up. These characters have been so well developed in my head over the years that it's almost liberating to write about them finally. Don't know why it took me so long.

Thanks again for all your input. :)

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Re: A short peice of fiction...

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Keep writing, you're good at it [grin] for descriptions use whatever knowledge you have to describe it. You're good with painting with words so I don't think it will be a problem for you. Just practice [thumbup]

And the block that you're feeling? It's merely a resistance to new ideas. I have a few tricks which can help you:

1. Write anything. And I mean anything. Just get your creative part of mind rolling, and from that point it will behave like perpetuum mobile. Grab the first thought in your mind, recognise your feelings about it and write it down.

2. Read a lot. Collect inspiration from the world around you. When you're walking try to describe things in your mind that you see in as little words as you can.

3. Sit down, do meditation or anything that will get your energy flowing. Take the nearest thing in your hands and reflect on it. Feel the shape, feel the texture, temperature. See the colors, light diffusing or reflecting. Tap it to hear it's sound. Get to know it, feel it. And then, write down what did you reflect.


All of this is a 3 part process. Reflection - feeling - writing. You can create your personal anti-block trick if you'd like [grin]

I hope it helps [yay] best of luck!

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Re: A short peice of fiction...

Post by Valkrane »

Once again, great advice. You really are brilliant. :)

My block was over today when I encountered a moth. Its funny how little things like that will do it.

Now I havw a few more ideas for scenes. I am thinking about writing more about the suicide attempt. It will be hard to do with such limited medical nknowlege and all. But I am always up for a challenge.

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EternalReturn
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Re: A short peice of fiction...

Post by EternalReturn »

Thank you [yay] but I would not call myself brilliant, I just like to write and think about things haha :D

Details are awesome [grin] I always look at them when I confront the writer's block.

Challenge is good, it gets you in the active state. If I find myself lacking knowledge on some subject my first thought is to google it. You can find great results, and if not go to wikipedia. Read the page to get to know the subject and then look at the Reference links. References in wikipedia are something awesome.
And Reddit. Don't forget Reddit.

Another way would be to get to know students who study medicine or psychology and try to ask them. Or if you have some writer's club in your town, consider joining. If not, create it if you'd like :D

And you gave me an idea for a topic. [yay]

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