Honesty
in writing is much-heard advice. You need to be authentic on the page,
because readers can spot a fake a mile away. But then, what's the
balance with knowing your reader, and knowing how to talk with that
reader? This writer asks a good question.
She
says more: "I've discovered that showing up in one's own authenticity
works fine as long as you fit into society. When your story is outside
of ordinary experience and/or challenges prevailing views of reality,
then one has to figure out adaptations that are consistent with
authenticity while also extending into readers' way of seeing the world
so that a connection can be found."
I
used to teach a class called "Writing through Healing." It was based
on James Pennebaker's research on how the simple act of writing can
heal. Writing that's authentic has three components:
1. It reveals the facts of the situation, using details that evoke the senses.
2. It shows how the writer felt then.
3. It shows how the writer feels now about what happened.
Each
of us can do one or more of these, but it's rare to find a writer who
does them all. But I've learned that until all three are present, the
alchemy cannot happen--either for writer or reader.
In
my classes, a writer might draft an intimate scene about something
traumatic. Anything from lying to stealing to death to abuse, and
everything in between. Each of us has suffered trauma. Our stories are
important.
At
first, most drafts include one end of the spectrum. Either the writer
enters from what I call the "inner story," and writes about the feelings
and memories in an abstract, conceptual way. Or the writer will lay
out all the details, unafraid of the facts. My job is to coach the
other aspect into being. Interestingly enough, the tears begin (in both
writer and reader) when all three elements are finally on the page.
And it truly becomes healing.
Say
you've practiced this. Your writing is beginning to include all three
elements. You've worked on bringing in the scene details (time of day
or year or season, smells and sounds) and the movements of players on
the stage (what actually happened) to satisfy point #1. You've thought
about how you felt then--terrorized, enraged, incredibly sad--and you've
begun to show this on the page, perhaps by gesture, body sensation, how
you moved or stayed very still. That satisfies point #2. You've also
allowed yourself to compare how you are now, with how you were then.
Even one line slipped in, brings that #3 point to play.
You're ready to workshop this, see how it reads to others. The litmus test.
Choose
your readers wisely. Very wisely. At this stage, you don't need
people to get hung up on what happened to you, begin to pity or avoid
you, or--worse--suggest you tone down the drama. For this first
exposure reading after you've incorporated the three points, above, you
need feedback on their ratios. How much drama is present, and is there
enough of the other two points to balance it? Have you made your own
reactions invisible, so the reader can't understand why you let yourself
go through this? (Some of us don't have a choice, granted. But on the
page, readers need to see your reasoning, your presence, not your
numbness.)
You
need someone who will (1) not make light of your trauma, (2) but not
overly react to just the trauma facts. See it as writing, not as your
life--in other words. To you, it is your life. To the reader, it has
to be a good story.
Because we are after good writing here, right? I think of some of the most admired trauma stories--All the Light We Cannot See, by Anthony Doerr, about two victims of World War II; White Oleander, by Janet Fitch, about a girl whose mother murders her boyfriend; The Glass Castle, by Jeanette Walls, about a child growing up with insane parents; The Things They Carried, by Tim O'Brien, about the horrors of the Vietnam War; and so many others.
What
took these stories beyond the personal, into the universal? First, the
elegant balancing of the three points above. Good crafting with a kind
readership that could get beyond the trauma into the writing. And
finally, the release of the story to the reader when it was ready.
We write what we're given to write. It's your story. It's yours to tell.
You
may get to the place of 0ne of my students, writing about her horrific
abuse, who initially told her readers to go f*ck themselves when they
objected to her descriptions. Her fierceness has carried her through to
a final--and very strong--draft, but only when she found a group of
equally fierce readers who could handle her rage on the page. Her
advice: If you get messages to tone it down, find yourself a different
group. They are out there. Stay true to your voice, your story.
I
agree. But I'll add: Make sure you are writing through to healing,
using the technique above, improving your craft skills, and releasing
the writing itself to a larger purpose, not just your own.
No comments:
Post a Comment