Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Avoiding a bad case of the stupids

I hate stupid people.

Now when I say that, I am not talking about uneducated people. In my opinion there are plenty of highly degreed idiots out there and smarts is not always correlated with being able to sit through long lectures and regurgitate that information on command (I can mock them- yes, I have been through the education mill- I have the student loans and useless degrees to show for it ;)).

What I hate are people who just won’t try to figure things out. You know the ones who walk into the abandoned house right after a serial killer on the loose has just been announced? The ones who even though they meet the man or woman of their dreams just can’t forgive them for something extremely trivial? Now in these cases it’s not the fault of the character or actor- sadly we have met the enemy and it is us.

Writers create stupid people.

We don’t mean to. Sometimes it’s just that we are focusing so much on getting all of the little plot pieces where they need to go, when they need to be there, we fail to realize our characters have crossed into “TSTL” range (Too Stupid To Live).

We worry too much about “making things happen” that we fail to pay attention to the character. Most often, when a character is acting TSTL the cause is an author pushing the character somewhere they didn’t want to go.

So how can we as writers make sure we don’t create stupid characters? By always questioning our character's actions, goals, and motivations. They not only need to be progressing through the story- they need to be progressing in a logical way through the story. When your character turns into that haunted house right after the news announcement of a crazed head hunter on the loose- she better have a damn good reason. (And no, chasing a missing cat, dog, or gerbil doesn’t count. BEEN DONE TO DEATH – aka BDTD). And for goodness sakes if your character absolutely has to do something stupid- make sure they acknowledge it. They can admit it’s dumb, they can fret about doing it, but their reasons for doing it had better be solid and stronger than the argument for not doing it.

Make sure your characters are moving how they are supposed to- not the way YOU want them to. Question EVERYTHING!

5 comments:

  1. I love this post! I so love a book/movie where the heroine tugs up the strap of her high heel sandal, runs through the dark woods, away from the safe cabin and trips, dropping her gun into the marsh. Then she gets up and drops her cellphone (which BTW has service) in the same marsh - she didn't call for help because she was too curious to find out what that odd sound in the forest was. Could it be the man-eating serial killer plaguing her small town?

    At that point, I'm kind of rooting for the bad guy...

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  2. I hate stupid people, too. I pray I didn't do that to any of my characters (so far no one has said anything).

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  3. LOL good post. I too root for the bad guy when the herioine runs away, trips and falls, then tries to hide behind a tree breathing loud enough to wake the dead.

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  4. LOL- thanks folks- of course now I've set myself up, so I'd best make sure none of my folks donated their brains while they were still breathing ;)

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  5. Great blog Marie! :)

    Nothing worse than having a character turn into a plot device! Yeek! LOL

    Lisa :)

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