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What
Will Your Character Do When Disaster Strikes?
By Carolyn Kaufman
Most people have seen the character worksheets that encourage writers to identify everything from shoe size and
favorite food to sexual
turn ons and turn offs. And while knowing your character's most
treasured possession might come in handy, it won't tell you how your character will react when disaster
strikes.
For that, you really need to have a handle on your character's personality, especially the five to ten "central
traits" that drive her behavior. To help you out, this article takes a 3-step approach to getting to know and
working with your character's most important traits.
Step One: Make a List of Your Character's Qualities
Grab a pen and make a list of qualities that describe your character. Write down as many as you can think of, being
sure to list personality traits (e.g. moody, prankish, logical, observant) and not physical characteristics like
eye or hair color. You can also download a big list of personality traits (PDF) and check off the ones that fit
your character best.
When you're done, you'll probably have a lot more than five or ten qualities, so you'll need to narrow things down.
One trick is to collapse qualities that are similar into categories. For example, if you noted that your character
has a great sense of humor, is a bit of a prankster, and likes to get into trouble, you could collapse all of those
qualities into a word like "mischievous." If your character is hotheaded, emotional, and cries easily, you could
say she's "moody."
Regardless of how you do it, work your list down to the ten traits that are most important to making your character
who she is. If you're feeling brave, rank order the list; doing so will help you with Step 3.
Step Two: Subjective Assessments
As in real life, personality characteristics are filtered through people's impressions. To get a better sense of
how your character sees herself and how that might differ from how others see her, use your list of ten key traits
to answer the questions below.
Which of the top ten traits does your character value most? Why?
How does your character want other people to see her?
How do people who dislike your character see her? (Hint: They probably have a negative take on qualities your
character sees as positive. For example, if your character is spontaneous, her enemies might see her as impulsive
or reckless. If she is outgoing, her enemies might see her as obnoxious.)
Which of the traits has your character worked the hardest to develop? For example, if being strong is important to
your character, what has she done to foster that trait? (The answer, or course, is going to depend on her
definition of strong. If being physically strong is important, then perhaps she's taken up weight lifting, but if
being emotionally strong is her goal, maybe she's done therapy.)
Which of these traits does your character use to deal with everyday problems? For example, if she gets stopped for
speeding, does she try to strike up a conversation with the officer? Is she deferential? Apologetic?
Argumentative?
Step Three: Disaster Strikes
Now that you have a pretty good feel for your character's personality, imagine disaster striking. The best kind of
disaster for a story, of course, is one your character is not equipped to handle.
Regardless of what the disaster is, most people's stress reactions are stronger versions of the way they deal with
other things. It's like, under pressure, the personality defaults to whichever traits are strongest. So your
character will default to his strongest central trait, or jump back and forth between two or three in his attempts
to deal with what has happened.
So let's say that one of your character's ten main traits is "intelligent." And let's say normally the way she
handles problems is to reason her way through them. If she's faced with disaster, she's going to try so hard to
make sense of it that she's likely to eschew emotion completely. Or let's say your character is "hot-headed." If he
normally gets angry when things go wrong, he's going to go ballistic when disaster strikes. Whatever makes your
character unique is what's going to characterize his feelings and reaction following the
disaster.
You may want to create a list of central traits for each of your main characters. Referring back to them will help
you keep everyone's reactions straight when disaster strikes!
Download in PDF
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Dr. Carolyn Kaufman is a clinical psychologist who teaches at Columbus State Community College in Columbus, Ohio. A
published writer, she recently launched Archetype Writing: Psychology for Fiction Writers (
http://www.archetypewriting.com). Visitors will find not only articles about psychology tailored to their needs,
but they can ask Dr. K their writing/psychology questions. She also blogs at
[http://querytracker.blogspot.com]http://querytracker.blogspot.com. She is often quoted by the media as an expert
resource.
Source: Ezine Articles
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