One of my Real Fears

Posted by on Jun 1, 2017 in Blog Posts, Philosophical Diatribe

My process for writing fiction is probably one of those things that other writers do but something I don’t know about.  For me, I need to live in my universe/world before I can create it.  I visualize everything and place myself there before I begin writing about it.  My short fiction tends to suffer because I don’t perform this task in as much detail as I would for a novel.  However, my novels are places I’ve lived in for many days, weeks, months, and some have even been there for years.  Since I was a kid, I loved teleporting myself into a world of my own creation before bed.  I would live there for some of my day and then rejoin those on Earth.  It was a trick, I could disappear and do whatever I wanted.  Yet, that ability, to vividly create something and believe you were there also has a downside. [Click “Read More” to go on a philosophical journey]

When I day dream, my mind writes the narrative and forms the structures around that story.  It can involve real people or wholly fictionalized individuals.  There could be a dragon that needs to be slayed or an AI that needs to be created.  I love that I can do this but it scares me.  Each time I return from these fantasies, I have to ask myself if I am losing a piece of who I am or was… is this bettering me… or destroying me?  It is important to remain grounded in the world that I actually inhabit – I believe I am able to tell the difference.

But what happens when I can no longer tell the difference.  When I see something and build up a story around situation and then believe it.  A simple smile from a girl I find attractive can turn into a sweeping narrative about our future together.  That’s not healthy in my mind.  Now you are probably thinking: “it’s all just a fantasy, you can clearly tell the difference because you are writing this blog post.”  but what happens when that person actually was interested in me?  How will I handle the reality against the fantasy.  What happens when the person’s back story is different than the one I fictionalized?  I designed the world around me to benefit me, that’s why it is called a fantasy (my books don’t suffer from pitfall of self pleasuring the writer, I really wouldn’t want to live in the worlds I write).  Will I enjoy what the real entity loves?  Or will I find it a character flaw and go out looking for the person who matches the creation of my mind?

This is a real fear of mine.  When reality deviates from what we have fantasized, we are bound to be disappointed in the outcome.  So, if you do this, do what I decided to do earlier this year… stop.  Don’t project your future in an unrealistic manner.  Let it come to you, plan, make decisions, and aim for a “hazy” goal.  Don’t make a concrete future, otherwise, when it deviates (and it will), you will end up disappointed.