Sunday 16 October 2011

People are strange...

I think you'll all agree that we all have our foibles, things that we do that make us the individuals we are.  Take me, for example.  It's a little known fact that I have to rock myself to sleep at night.  An activity my mother had always hoped I'd grow out of - a hope my other half is still clinging to to this day.  Of course, I'm pleased to say that my particular foible is confined to the privacy of my own bedroom and compared to many of the goings on in many another sleeping quarter, it is actually pretty boring.  But it's the little quirks like these that make us all the more interesting.  And for a fiction writer like myself who loves to play with character, such peculiarities can actually be quite fascinating.

Even more so, when people are more than happy to broadcast their idiosyncrasies - people like my next door neighbour.

Now she's a lovely lady; a woman who happily goes about her business, chatting to anyone and everyone she meets, her little dog constantly in tow.  Completely unassuming in every way...  So imagine my surprise when after a couple of glasses of wine she began telling me about her day down at the beach - the beach directly overlooked by a well used viewing point, I have to say.  Of course, this is a viewing point that I can only assume she forgot was there;  I mean, why else would she have proceeded to strip naked, frolick on the surrounding rocks, then dive into the surrounding ocean, all the while telling herself she was a mermaid?

Not that she really compared herself to a humanoid fish, I should admit - I just added that bit for effect. 

But then again, that's my point.  As writers it's important to make all our characters interesting.  And by telling you my otherwise completely sane neighbour spent her afternoon not just nude, but imitating a naked mermaid, she became far more interesting to read about.   
    

6 comments:

  1. Oh that's rich! I can only imagine the person's thoughts as they looked down on that beach. Priceless. Of course, if you were writing fantasy it would turn out that she really was a mermaid.

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  2. A mermaid imagining herself as a woman, perhaps?

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  3. I love when a character has a bizarre quirk. I always think, "Why didn't I come up with that?"

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  4. I always think it's the bizarre quirks that give a character depth x

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  5. SUZIE--I love to find outsomething about an acquaintance that I did not know, something that, as you say, makes that person much more interesting. Talking to people and allowing them to talk often brings out something interesting.
    I pick up a little old lady near 90 for a Bible circle meeting once a month (no, I'm not an Inspirational author), and everyone sees her as just that--a tiny lady who is almost blind now, but is still articulate and keeps up with world news. Well, I know her story--she worked as a foreign courier all over Europe and West Africa, and India her entire adult working life. She speaks three languages, never married, and all her friends are dead. She wears a unique antique ring--I asked her--tell me about that ring. She said, "It's from India, a woman's ring, and this on top that looks like a jewel is really a cap to a small compartment. The women keep theirs filled with a deadly poison--in case she needed to kill a man."
    Now, who on earth would have thought she knew all that?
    Nice post--I enjoyed it!

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  6. What a fascinating woman - makes you wonder what other tales she has to tell. And you're right, Cathy, talking and listening brings about a sharing of information we'd otherwise never have known about x

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