Thursday, April 24, 2014
Write with Impact Definition: Memory
Mythic Impact
Last week I asked, Why
do we read the same book over and over? Or watch a movie countless times? And
then suggested, Because something in that
particular story at that particular season of our life spoke directly into our
hearts.
Whenever we participate in a family event, or tradition, we
carry into the experience all our memories of before. Our personal echoes,
whether positive or negative, are attached to us, and are necessary for our
present reality just as Peter Pan’s shadow must be re-attached to complete him.
Like a parable there is a surface story and also an undercurrent story that
produces an emotional resonance within us every time we remember. These stories
help define our desire to continue our family heritage or choose to break away
from harmful patterns of behavior.
Family memories are a significant bridge across cultures and
generations. Birth, death, education, weddings, parties, and relatives are all
common ground even when the actual reality differs widely. Taping into memories
that every one can identify with adds impact to our writing. We will either
bond from similar feelings or empathize with more compassion the ones that we
never imagined.
In the young adult novel Keeper
of the Isis Light, by Monica Hughes, the reader immediately is pulled into
Olwen’s life as she celebrates her 16th birthday, which counts as
her tenth on the planet Isis, and at the same time is stricken by the
circumstances that she has spent the last ten years as an orphan growing up in
solitude with only someone she calls Guardian. Empathy and curiosity pull us
into her story even though it is set on a far off planet. She is real—her
emotions are real—her solitude is real. And that impact carries us all the way
to the surprising twist at the end of how in fact she survived. Her birthday—a
common ground memory—lays the foundation.
Reading scripture stories gives us a language for our faith
journey. And builds in memories for when we might be faced with moral or faith
commitments. The memories of how others coped in difficult situations can
become path stones for our own choices as well as for our characters. We may
not be called to cross a Red Sea, as did the Israelites, but the courage to
take the bridge out of town and begin a new way of living can have a similar
exodus journey.
Our past histories can leave markings on our souls as clear
as lines on a paper map. Sometimes they’re so worn and smudged we don’t
recognize their influence, positive or negative, until we come to that corner
in the middle of choice. And that is how we want our readers to react when our
characters are faced with life-changing decisions.
We squirm and bite our nails, hold our breath, warn them “no
don’t” or “take a chance”, because we relate deep down in our own heart
experiences. Using memories honestly helps us write with impact.
Share: When you
were a child what family story did you want to hear over and over again? Or did
not want to hear?
Read deep,
marcy
Labels:
Build Your Story,
Definition Memory,
Faith Journey,
Keeper of the Isis Light,
Personal History,
Write with Impact
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This is a very good piece. I often read books and watch movies multiple time. I always said it was because I notice something new each time and that is true but the things you pointed out I just realized are part of why I do it too. I put this up on my blog with credit to you or course.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing, Melissa. I love it when thoughts connect.
ReplyDelete