O Is For… Observation!
Contributed by Nicole.
Observation for writers is both a key factor and our personal hell. We observe our environment, people and the world around us and transmit that through our writing. It’s our personal hell because how you transmit those observations can be very difficult.
In the case of a fiction writers, how a character examines and interacts with their environment affects the narrative. How you communicate their observations has to be tailored to the individual or to the situation. For instance, a ten-year-old child is going to view the world in a significantly different way from a battle-hardened veteran. The way the information is relayed to the reader sets the tone and drives the story.
Observation can be a tool to get yourself out of a rut. I take a blank notebook to a busy place like a park or a mall food court and watch people. Why is that particular woman going into the jewelry store? Is she picking up a gift? Is she arranging to have her jewelry cleaned? Maybe she just learned that her partner is cheating on her and she’s buying something to make herself feel beautiful and valued. What about the buff looking guy grabbing pizza? Is he cheating on his diet plan and worried that his coach will find out? Maybe he’s an MME fighter and he’s plotting ways to impress the female opponent who beat him last week and he knows that she hits the smoothie place next door? Looking around and asking ‘why’ and ‘what if’ is an affective way to take your characters in new directions or have them approach a problem in a different way.
Observation becomes a writer’s personal hell because we are compelled to relay how we view the world and that is difficult. Finding the words to give a picture that can be understood is hard-don’t let anyone tell you differently.
In the end, writers are observers and the way we communicate our views is how we write, so ‘O’ is for ‘Observation’.

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