Tuesday, July 5, 2011

There is yet good in the world. (Surprise!)

I just got back from vacation, writer-friends.

Okay, fine; I use the word “vacation” a bit liberally, since my “vacation” consisted of getting up at 4am for an early flight down to parts southern, then spending several days with teetotallers and then driving back from Alabama-ish overnight with three young children, only to find that our above-ground pool had bred three new species of algae and that the giant pumpkin plant my wife planted a month ago had taken over approximately 92% of our garden. But still.

I realized something, though, while I was traversing the Bible Belt, and it’s this: there are still good people in the world.

I’ll explain.

See, there’s this strange, fucked-up world that exists in my head. It’s rather consuming, and it’s what I’ve lived with for a couple of decades, so it goes with out saying that such a mode of being becomes ingrained—habitual, so to speak.

But there’s a problem with habit: you begin to think it’s the norm. Except habit is not the norm; it’s only in your head that it’s writ large and applied to the whole world.

There really are decent people out there.

So what if my daily existence oscillates between mind-numbing work and a seething morass of self-hatred and judgement? Not everyone is like that. Some people actually understand balance and stability.

It’s hard, sometimes, to comprehend that fact.

My habit, friends, as a writer, is to take things to a fundamentally awful end of the experiential spectrum. I look at any given situation and find ways to make it worse. I brutalize my characters, bringing them as close to the edge as is possible, grinding them down, mercilessly crushing their spirits to find the hard, unbreakable, diamond center where they finally, irrevocably meet the unavoidable truth of their existence. I tend to see the worst. My stock-in-trade is the worst.

But if you spend long enough doing that, you lose sight of other points of view. There really is another way of looking at things. A perspective from which everything really isn’t dark, dismal, painful, and hopeless.

I know, right?

There’s a different way of looking at the world, is all I’m saying. There are actually people out there with well-adjusted children and a distinct lack of internal conflict. And, strange as it may seem, some people have achieved happiness sans chemicals.

I…I guess I’ll have to account for that somehow in my fiction, now, won’t I? Weird.

(I don’t get it either.)

(I may have to have another drink to deal with this little revelation.)

(Who’s with me?)

25 comments:

  1. Absolutely true, Simon. But apparently I'm too far gone, because the only way I can manage to work these dear, sweet people into a story is to have something awful happen to them. I just don't have the heart for it.

    It's hot. Make mine a margarita.

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  2. Hm. Maybe I'm not cruel enough to my characters. I think the real world is awesome. We live in the future, other countries are pointing fewer missiles at us, and I don't hear racial slurs if I mention how attractive I think Zoe Saldana is.

    Then again, it's been a while since I've hung out with a gang of homeless people at 3 in the morning in front of a strip club and a White Castle. That was a pretty depressing experience. But even there, one guy resisted his urge to stab me after I offended him by offering to buy him a hamburger.

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  3. "There really are decent people out there" and "I look at any given situation and find ways to make it worse." Taken slightly out of context if you don't read the whole comment . .

    In my day job I see the worst, try to envision a happier outcome. Not HAPPY ending, just better. When I write; I take the worst and try to make it acceptable, through my MC eyes. I guess in that way I see my clients as real people with potential; not crisis in need of management.

    *sighs* I hoist my wine glass to you Sir; knowing what you mean. I also clap my hands for fairy's, believe Dragons cannot exist without Wizards - and vice versa - and wonder where the fine line between a good FBI agent and the elitist thief he chases begins and ends.

    As writers, we get to reinvent reality, if only in our own minds :)

    ........dhole

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  4. You found people like that in Alabama? That is kind of uplifting. But that doesn't mean you have to write about them. Normal, healthy, well adjusted people are terribly boring to read about, unless you're doing awful things to them (as the author, get your mind out of the gutter).

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  5. What I find interesting are when these two types of people (the optimist and pessimist) bump up against one another in the same trying situation.

    Is the optimist's optimism only skin deep, and how do encounters with evil affect him? How does the pessimist respond to another's unexplicable mercy and kindness? (Hmm, that last one seems like a good, challenging a theme for you to try. 'Cause I'm mean like that. (-: )

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  6. Hehe, they DO exist! Somewhere...

    Is it sad that I have chemicals to balance my brain? Sigh.

    I really want to see a picture of that pumpkin, by the way.

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  7. By "have chemicals" I mean I take a pill every day.

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  8. You met my mother?

    And most peeps in the bible belt do not need chemicals because they are high on the Lord. I know, I was raised there. Which is a whole other topic altogether.

    But they can be pretty nice.

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  9. Welcome back! You found nice people in the south? Can you point them out? Just kidding!

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  10. So long as there is a Simon Larter dispensing healthy amounts of snark throughout the blogosphere, my faith in humanity will not perish. You're a good man, Simon.

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  11. It really does get easy to see the conspiracies everywhere when you are looking for ways to write conspiracies. I think my YA focus is a little good, in that there is always a reslience and hope element to it... not matter how horrible... and I really like to have a couple characters who really surprise readers by being better than you'd think from first glance, but yeah... I know what you're talking about.

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  12. There are definitely kind, generous, sans an agenda out there. :)

    I happen to love the friendliness of the south. And the food. And the hooch.
    However, depending on how far down we are talkin', I do NOT love the brutal heat and humidity. I'm in Fla. at Disney right now--still-- and it's steamier and hotter than Satan's crotch in polyester pants during a strenuous workout down here. I know it's hot in NJ too, but, dude, trust me, it's freaking HOT down here. The air is stifling.
    (it's hot in SC too, but there I have the ocean, breeze, and pool at hand.)

    See you soon.
    Also, I too want pix of the great pumpkin patch!

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  13. The problem with commenting on your blog is that I have nothing to add to your awesomeness. Just remember that if the seething morass of self-hatred and judgment starts to drag you under.

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  14. Hey, I'm a teatotaller (except I don't really drink tea either, unless I am eating Chinese food)!

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  15. Darl'n! You were in my neck of the woods???!!!! Oh how I hate I missed the opportunity!

    Yes there is good still in this world. I have seen it all my life and live among some of the best. After all the craziness of this summer's storms,I have seen it arrive, leave, stay and endure. Good things happen even in the midst of tragic surroundings. Good people shine even when you think darkness is all that is left. I have never been a cynic, never been one to see the bad side of things and I am glad of that. My world might be too much the opposite of yours in your head (sunshine and rainbows can make some cynics physically ill) and it can sometimes be trying for me to write the harsh, bitter sides - but I work at it. Try to write that character, the one with the opposite mindset than your norm, remember to give her/him the best of it all but with a healthy understanding that yes bad things happen, bad people exist, but why focus on that when all we should focus on is leaving wherever we are, whoever we meet with a positive experience. It is a gift we can give so easily and to so many.

    Hate I missed ya down here...hope the hospitality was pleasant, the sun warm and the food delicious.

    Visit My Kingdom Anytime

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  16. When I reread some of my earlier drafts, I could tell which sections were written on days when I was stressed out; on those days, all of my characters seemed to be in a bad mood.
    There are definitely good people out there. When people do small things like open the door for me instead of letting it slam shut in my face or when they let me cross the street without honking at me, it helps me feel better and not obsess as much over all the other people who don't do those things.

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  17. VR: Yeah...that's kind of what I tend to do. So a margarita it is! :)

    Ryan: White Castle is depressing at any time of day, I've found....

    TQH: Cheers back! :)

    Donna: That's half the fun of writing, isn't it? Making our own little world? Makes me happy, it does. :D

    Matt: I suppose you're right, at that. Up with degenerates!

    Laurel: See that's why you're great to have around. Always taking things deeper. ;)

    Michelle: I'll work on that pumpkin pic, m'dear. Also, do they make alcohol in pill form? I'd like a prescription for that....

    Marsha: Well, they weren't Pentecostal, just rather fundy. Nice with it, though. Even without chemicals. ;)

    Alex: *Points to Courtney Barr's comment below* :)

    Jeff: I worry about you, dude, if I'm keeping your faith in humanity alive!

    Hart: YA seems to demand more hope, m'dear. I think you're right about that. Pity I don't write YA.... *sigh*

    Lola: Geez. Humidity? I'm am SO not built for that. Humidity hasn't been invented in Scotland yet. :)

    Cyndi: When the seething morass of self-hatred and judgment starts to drag me under, I usually reach for the vodka. It's rather helpful. ;)

    Ted: It's okay, good sir. We can still be friends even if you don't drink. :D

    Courtney: I was way up north in 'bama, m'dear. Near the TN border. And you, good lady, are good people, without a doubt. *hugs*

    NW: On the other hand, when people do jerkwad things, at least you can kill them off nastily in your stories. It's cathartic! :D

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  18. Where in the south? (That's where I live.) I'm the opposite - I'm uber positive and optimistic, so I don't always see the really dark things.

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  19. Oh Simon.

    Hope, my dear. HOPE.

    This trip was good for you, I think.

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  20. I'll drink to that! :)

    I think I'm pretty well-adjusted. Except when men make random outbursts about me in crowded elevators. ;)

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  21. LDW: Alabama, just a bit north of Huntsville. And occasionally, just every now and then, I envy you optimistic people. ;)

    Carol: Hope. Isn't that that thing with feathers that perches in the soul and won't shut up? I may have to try that sometime. :)

    Karen: To be fair, it wasn't random in the least. It was quite deliberately-timed. ;)

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  22. Simon, you could write an MG novel now with your new revelation :D I love my nice characters, they give me some hope in a world full of...err...not so nice people :) They do exist in real life too! Admittedly, far and few between, but they're there.

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  23. YOU WERE IN ALABAMA AND I DIDN'T KNOW???

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  24. Emailman: Er...MG? Me? I tried that once. It ended up being a sex scene.... >.>

    Anne: I WAS! Right by the TN border, tho, and only for one night. I know I should have stalked you while I was there, but I had the wife and kids with me. :)

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You can snark at me. I don't mind.