Possibilities
When it comes to writing, possibilities are all around us, and they not only can provide inspiration for our next masterpiece, but they can be a potent remedy for Writer’s Block. Every day, events both large and small happen in our lives, and they potentially contain our next story or novel. Not only that, they contain seeds that can blossom in many different directions.
Here’s an example from my own experience. A few days ago, I went in for plastic surgery to remove three lesions on my head. It was painful. After the surgeon cut around the lesions, he gave me shots with a tiny needle to numb them for removal. As I lay there, occasionally joking with him, it occurred to me that there just might be a story in this. What if I got up from the table, looked in the mirror, and found that I had a new face? Perhaps I’d leave the office to discover I’d lost my public identity. No one recognized me anymore, and that included my wife, my kids, the people at work, my employer, and so on. Imagine trying to earn a paycheck under these conditions, or getting amorous with my wife when I looked like someone else.
Can you guess what tabloids would make of this? PLASTIC SURGEON ACCIDENTALLY GIVES MAN A NEW FACE! Use your imagination and create your own banner headline.
But this is ridiculous, right? For Pete’s sake, I only went in to remove a few lesions. Still, in the realm of the imagination, anything is possible.
Here’s another possibility: I gazed in the mirror and saw my new face, but no one else did. To the world at large, I looked exactly the same. In fact, even when I was photographed, I looked like the John of old. But not to me. To Yours Truly, I appeared to be someone completely different, perhaps even a . . . woman.
Hmm . . . that may be going too far. Still, can you imagine the interesting complications that would create in my life, the fascinating fictional twists I could give it? Please ponder the possibilities.
Maybe you’re a realistic writer and have no tolerance for full-blown fantasy. Very well. Let’s make the plastic surgeon an attractive woman, and when our eyes meet, we have an instant connection. At first I think it’s romance and that I’ve found a lifelong soul mate, but later I discover the surgeon’s my daughter from a casual one-night stand thirty years ago. And woe for me, she wants revenge for never having a father.
No, scratch that last sentence. It’s too bizarre.
Let’s tack in another direction. Science-fiction, perhaps. Or horror. My plastic surgeon is a mad scientist, or at least a man who finally can’t resist the temptation to try a new, untested procedure. So Dr. Jekyll injects my cheek with a mysterious solution, and in the days to come, I gradually transform into an evil, physically grotesque creature. Or perhaps I change into a divinely beautiful one, so exquisite I can no longer live among people. Or perhaps . . .
By now, you should get the idea. If you’re a writer, possibilities surround you 24/7 and enrich your life even though they may wear prosaic clothes. They’re as close and imminent as your next visit to a drugstore or visit to the dentist, even as close as your next sneeze or broken shoelace. Keep a creative eye open for them, folks, and you just might have your next (prize-winning?) story.
Gotta love the “what if?” game.
Great essay, John! I love the way your mind works, sparking ideas off one-another.
Stan
Interesting. I totally agree and have to say that, as a fantasy author, the 24/7 events of my life are the basis for all my writing – after all, I have no other basis from which to initiate a story. Sure, imagination, innovation, creativity come into play to extend, combine and change what comes out the other end, but whichever way you look at it, my experiences are the foundation stone. My recently published book, Randolph’s Challenge Book One – The Pendulum Swings is a catalogue of extensions of things that have happened to me, admittedly in some cases extended a very long way, but they all started from an event in my life.
Just two other points to make from your article: the first is that, I don’t believe writer’s block is a real thing – how can it be when every event in your life is a foundation stone for writing – the only time writer’s block is a reality is when you’re dead! The secong point is about the ‘tag’ fantasy. I tend to prefer the description ‘extended reality’ to that of ‘fantasy’ for the very reason you explain; all my writing is reality extended to strange and unusual situations.
Chris Warren
Author and Freelance Writer
Randolph’s Challenge Book One – The Pendulum Swings
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