We as people, especially those of us with anxiety disorders, spend a great deal of time playing the “what if” game. We are, in a way, already playing with fiction. Why not channel our imaginations and extend our “what ifs” to the page?
This is a craft prompt. This exercise isn’t meant to be therapeutic, so if at any point, you start to feel anxious, distressed, or triggered, please take a step back and care for yourself.
Then choose one of your fears and spend a few minutes writing about why you’re afraid. Even if the fear seems irrational, you can reach deeper, past the surface. For example, I am terrified of getting a blood clot. There’s no rational reason for this—I don’t smoke, I don’t take birth control, I exercise every day. But it’s not the blood clot specifically I’m so afraid of—it’s the manifestation of my fear of dying, specifically of dying now that I’m finally happy.
Next, answer these questions related to your fear:
How long have you had this fear? Is it new, old?
Can you remember the source of this fear?
How far will you go to avoid this fear?
What are some consequences of your fear? How does it affect your life?
When you encounter your fear, how do you feel in your body?
Where does the fear live in your body? Is it a part of you or extraneous?
How does this fear affect your senses? What does it taste, smell, look like? It is always the same or does it shape-shift?
How do you deal with your fear? Do you stuff it down? Do you make light of it through humor? Do you overcompensate?
Now that you have established a fear for your character, you’re ready to make your character’s worst fear come true. But you’ll want to exacerbate this fear to enhance dramatic tension. Think of why this fear coming true would be extremely problematic and challenging for your character. Say they have a severe social phobia. You may want to force this character, for one reason or another, to attend a huge gathering soon. Maybe their loved one died under mysterious circumstances, and they want to go to the funeral to try to investigate further.
You’ll likely have several ideas related to increasing dramatic tension. Take the next few minutes to write a list of possible one-sentence plot synopses, for a story or novel. Don’t overthink it, just let them flow out of you. Brainstorming is not a time for judgment.
Once you’re done, choose your favorite synopsis and expand it into a one-paragraph synopsis. Then expand it into a flash fiction piece or short story. You may be surprised to see just how easily the story develops when you play into a character’s fears.
When I think about writing into fear, I think of it as a vehicle for action and inaction, both of which are helpful in crafting character and plot. Much like desire, fear drives so many of our decisions and shapes our approach to life. It can lead to impulsive, ill-advised decisions; it plummets us into chaos. Fear can also make us avoidant, so avoidant that we fail to fully live our lives. Oftentimes, fear becomes the wedge between who we are and who we want to be, and what is better for creating inner conflict than that? If you know someone’s deepest fears, you know exactly how to hurt them. And so much of writing fiction is intentionally hurting our characters, whether emotionally, spiritually, or physically, to see what they do with their pain, and how they handle adversity.
Marisa Crane is a writer, basketball player, and sweatpants enthusiast. Their work has appeared or is forthcoming in Joyland, No Tokens, TriQuarterly, Passages North, Florida Review, Catapult, Lit Hub, The Rumpus, and elsewhere. An attendee of the Tin House Workshop and Bread Loaf Writers' Conference, they live in San Diego with their wife and child. They are the author of the novel, I Keep My Exoskeletons to Myself (January 17, 2023, Catapult).
We as people, especially those of us with anxiety disorders, spend a great deal of time playing the “what if” game. We are, in a way, already playing with fiction. Why not channel our imaginations and extend our “what ifs” to the page?
We as people, especially those of us with anxiety disorders, spend a great deal of time playing the “what if” game. We are, in a way, already playing with fiction. Why not channel our imaginations and extend our “what ifs” to the page?
We as people, especially those of us with anxiety disorders, spend a great deal of time playing the “what if” game. We are, in a way, already playing with fiction. Why not channel our imaginations and extend our “what ifs” to the page?