Main Characters are Two People

PHS:

An interesting take on character development – re-blogging on Archer’s Aim!


Originally posted on Storiform.com:


Olmec six feet high found in jungleAt times, my protagonist lacks the third dimension. Today, I found out why.



In her book, The Willpower Instinct, Kelly McGonigal, PhD, suggests that our prefrontal cortex’s ability to say, “I will,” “I won’t,” and “I want” separates us from the animals.



It’s as if there were two people inside each of us, she says – one who wants to be thin and one who wants a donut.



To bring a character to life, it may be essential to include the thing that this brilliant PhD health psychologist from Stanford considers the defining human trait: self-control.





Every living, breathing, leading fictional character contains two different people who are fighting for control. It’s an internal war.



Like everything real, the level of internal conflict falls naturally into a bell-shaped curve.



Heroes will often be outliers in their area of strength, of course…



Johanna, for instance, doesn’t hesitate to sacrifice herself for her autistic brother (he’s fighting depression in the latest version, actually).



But when it comes…


View original 270 more words


Filed under: Uncategorized
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on October 09, 2014 19:32
No comments have been added yet.