You Have to Feel the Character

As you're writing, you cannot communicate to the reader what a character is feeling unless you can feel it. It's that simple.

I was writing a scene last night where a woman suddenly feels a hand covering her mouth. She knows her friend is in the house but not if it is him or not. How do I describe this?

I closed my eyes and envisioned the suddenly darkened room. I waited until I could feel my heart beat faster as I was blind and vulnerable. I noted how all my senses went into overdrive. I could smell things I could smell before. I could hear things that may or may not have been real.

I then imagined the hand suddenly covering my mouth. I felt the panic. I felt the fear. I felt the strong arm and hand.

I had my description for my character.

How do you get the right descriptions for your character?
 •  3 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 23, 2012 22:56 Tags: character, description, feel
Comments Showing 1-3 of 3 (3 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Bethanie (new)

Bethanie Armstrong YES!!! Those very high emotion moments--my stomach clenches, I feel like I want to scream and it's what my character is feeling. When you can do that you can write possibly one of the best books, scenes, situations, ever. I so love writing!!


message 2: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Graf It's fun isn't it? I'm going back now on some drafts and really drawing out the emotional scenes and making them stronger.


message 3: by Bethanie (new)

Bethanie Armstrong Great!! Enjoy it. It really makes it satisfying when you do!


back to top