The `Casablanca` Secret

Released on: March 20, 2008, 3:30 am

Press Release Author: Technoflickers

Industry: Small Business

Press Release Summary: Good writing is often designed around a character that has a
distorted vision of himself or of the world. During the story, he is placed under
sufficient pressure to force an epiphany, a moment of clarity in which, he sees the
world as it is, not as he wished it to be.

Press Release Body: Good writing is often designed around a character that has a
distorted vision of himself or of the world. During the story, he is placed under
sufficient pressure to force an epiphany, a moment of clarity in which, he sees the
world as it is, not as he wished it to be.
A classic example is "Casablanca," where Bogart's immortal Rick has managed to
create an insular world in which he can pretend to be utterly detached and
uninvolved. He supposedly has no political beliefs, and no real human connections.
But the reappearance of Ilsa forces a cascade of events that cause Rick to reexamine
his attitudes about love, fate, patriotism, courage, fidelity, friendship, and life
itself. Rick begins as a damaged, closed off character, carrying wounds to his heart
and ego. What he WANTS is to be left alone to his self-pity. What he NEEDS is to be
re-awakened to a life of purpose. The writers, wisely, give Rick what he needs, not
what he wants, and in that manner a classic was born.
In LifewritingT we trust that the quality of a writer's skill will be heightened by
his evolution as a human being-in other words, his ability to write people will be
based on his capacity for honest observation of himself and others. His ability to
turn a plot creatively will be based on his understanding of the world as it is-not
as we often fantasize it to be. This ability to create moments of suspense,
revelation, humor and horror often triggers an "ah! Life is just like that!"
response from the audience, a recognition of universal humanity that can transcend
culture and time.
The easiest way to learn this is to look at our own lives. None of us make it
through our years without wounds, damage, pain. Just as physical scar tissue
shortens muscles and limits mobility, emotional scar tissue creates "armoring"
around our hearts. It also begins to warp our reality, as we create justifications
for why THIS relationship self-destructed, or THAT job crashed and burned.once
again. It's never our fault, of course. The opposite, and even more damaging
reaction is to take not just responsibility for our failures, but massive guilt as
well. Our lives don't work (so the reasoning goes) because we are bad, terrible,
horrible people undeserving of healthy bodies or relationships or careers.
Either attitude clouds our vision, makes it difficult to see the world as it is.
Those clouded inner eyes and warped "reality maps" make it very difficult to
navigate a path to our chosen goals. Again and again we will bark our shins on
invisible rocks, crashing into invisible walls, almost as if life is trying to teach
us, to educate us, to enlighten us as to the realities of existence.
What we WANT is the comforting womb of our illusions. What we NEED is to be born
into the world as it actually is.
Often, we are dragged kicking and screaming into clarity, forced ultimately to
accept the ways we've been wrong. "Too soon old, too late smart" is one rather
fatalistic way of speaking of this process. Too often, we must be old before we
grasp that WE are the ones who sabotaged our dreams of success. We are the ones who
refused to exercise and eat reasonably-that our bodies are more the result of our
behaviors than our genetics. We are the ones who broke communication in our
relationships, who lied and withheld and blamed, and thought that "the other person"
was responsible for our misery. We are the ones who refused to grow up, to stop
blaming our parents, or society, or racism, ageism, sexism or any other "ism" for
our lack of happiness.
Too late, we are battered by one failure or disappointment after another, until the
ego walls we created to protect our self-image are shattered, and we're forced into
contact with our true selves. The moment of death is supposed to be absolutely first
rate at creating such clarity, a realization of our true values, and regret at the
way we sold out our true potential.
But there are events that create clarity. The birth of a first child. A near-death
experience. Accomplishing some worthy and transforming goal. The first deep and true
moment of love or friendship. Transformation. In such moments, we see ourselves for
the magnificent, wounded, earthy, spiritual beings that we are. We forgive
ourselves, and our families, and the world around us, knowing that we have no right
to expect more perfection from others than we ourselves possess. And as the saying
goes, "all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God." No perfect people in
this world. Accept it. And move on.
Stories that deal with these core stressors--life, death, birth, transformation,
love-are always, and have always been the most popular stories in human history.
Under this stress, your character, robbed of their self-justifying lies, must speak
the truth. Under these stressors, they are revealed in their magnificence.or
sometimes (especially if they refuse to acknowledge reality) revealed in their
venality, cowardice, and dishonesty.
This is one of the functions of story. The writer must create story pressures beyond
the capacity of the characters to maintain their illusions. Then, and only then, can
you reveal their true natures. To do this, just look at the times in your own life
that you awakened, transformed, grew, went kicking and screaming into the next level
of your life. Then create dramatic exaggerations or simplifications of these
passages, and create characters to experience them. Let them be as human-as flawed
and magnificent-as you yourself are. As we all are. Heighten their qualities for the
sake of drama, to be sure, but always, always, at their core, let them be human,
whatever it is that you believe human beings to be.



Web Site: http://www.allfreereports.com

Contact Details: nanak1040@gmail.com,Prakash Sharma,S.C.O. 90, Sec.35/C Chandigarh

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