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Start By Mapping Yourself |
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Why should I map myself? To best understand the insights to be gained in the Character Map, I suggest that writers map themselves as though they were a character in a movie or television series. This is the best way to test the process.
The mapping process starts with the personal and moves to the universal. Mapping yourself will help you look at the Emotional Toolbox process personally and assess its truth and validity. It will also help you examine the universal application of the process and discover how to apply it to all the characters in your screenplay. All great writing moves from the personal to the universal.
This is the best place to start. After all, you are a complex, interesting, fully-formed three-dimensional human being. You constantly wrestle with a variety of strong emotions and struggle continually with a whole range of internal conflicts. These are the kinds of characters you should write about.
Writers are always advised to write what they know. What writers (and all other human beings) know the most about is change. Living, by definition, is to change. Nothing in life is static. Change and transformation are all around you. Both impact you every day.
You live in an unsettling upsetting and constantly changing world. Your world is full of uncertainty, evolving relationships, personal and professional ups and downs and conflicting responsibilities, loyalties, commitments and desires. The characters in your script should experience their world in exactly the same way.
You know exactly how painful change and transformation can be. You have experienced extreme, dramatic and sometimes excruciating change. Your life has been full of unexpected reversals, complex dilemmas and difficult growth experiences-- and so should the lives of the characters in your script. (And there's no reason why all this turmoil and pain shouldn't be hilarious. Great comedians know-- "If it don't hurt, it ain't funny.")
So how do you create fictional film and television characters out of all of this. How do you create a screenplay or teleplay filled with the kinds of emotions and changes you've experienced? It helps to have a process to turn your own raw material into fiction. That's where your Character Map is useful.
Mapping your own character will help you create fictional film and television characters. By understanding how change and transformation works in your life, you will gain insight into how to use this powerful process to create complex, interesting fully-formed three-dimensional fictional human beings-characters. You will create characters who are emotionally true and who have a life and integrity all their own.
I believe the creative process always starts with your own emotional truth. The only thing that makes your script unique is your personal point of view. Human beings have been telling stories since we were able to speak. There are no new stories. The only thing new is you and the way you see and experience the world. Who are you? What do you believe? What insights do you have to share with the world? What is the truth as you see it? Put real emotional truth into your screenwriting and your script will stand out from the rest.
There are six simple questions to answer in creating your Character Map. Click Here to go to the Character Map Questions.
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