Forest Wells - Author
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Absorbing My Own Work

9/20/2014

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Picture
Just the other night, I had to deal with a rattlesnake.  It's nothing new to me.  As a Southern California resident, we all grew up learning all we needed to know about them.  But this was the first time I was tasked with killing one.

Thing is, he was curled up in my front yard.  I think he was sleeping.  Our dog went right by him, and he didn't react.  However, I wasn't about to go for the kill with him in striking position.  So I kept checking on him, waiting for him to stretch out.  During that time, I generated, and rejected, some ideas about how to get at him even so.  Were I better with a gun, I would have tried that.

Then at last, he moved.  My older brother held the light, and I held the shovel.  I stalked him as he began inching toward the brush.  He was all stretched out now.  He knew of me, of that I was certain.  He just didn't care.  I got as close as I needed to while watching his neck carefully.  If he turned toward me, I would need to retreat or strike in an instant.  But he never did.  Finally, I was in position.  The shovel light in my hands.  My arms tense.  My legs were ready to go where needed.  In one thrust I landed the blade right behind his head.  He never even rattled.  One blow was all I needed.  I'd just taken a bit of a risk with my life, and won.

And not once was I afraid.

Afterward I realized I had been channeling one of my characters.  The main character of a sci-fi that's in the works talks about having a "switch".  An almost tangible change from normal to combat mode.  When it "flips", fear is there only to keep him aware and alert.  Otherwise, it might as well not be there.  He's cool, collected, careful of course, but still very determined in his goal at the moment.  A state I never thought I had, until I was staring down a rattlesnake without fear.  Well okay, not so much without fear as without it getting in the way.  It kept me careful, but I was never anything but confident.

It's not the the first time my characters have left their mark on me.  Another thing this particular character has left me with is the phrase "small favors".  It's a comment on little good things in the middle of a not-so-good situation.

For example: "Tire's flat on the highway."
"Look on the bright side, it's nice and cool, and there's no rain."
"Small favors."

Not quite a dismissal, though in the novel (you can read it later), it started as something else and it just never went away.

Still, I find my worlds and characters are leaving their mark on me even though in theory, they are a part of me already.  Does make me wonder.  Are they changing me, or am I learning about myself as I develop them?

Even characters buried in my writing que, yet to be touched, are having an effect.  From the werewolf forcing me to look at issues from different sides, to the dragon teaching me about letting others in, to the young factory worker telling me to make my choices then accept the consequences.  So many things I never knew about myself are coming to light as I explore these fictional worlds.

It's all rather fascinating.  Not to mention a bit encouraging.  If they're making such an impact on me, perhaps that means they'll make the same or more on my readers.

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The Power of Words

9/7/2014

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I'd like you to watch the video below.  It's short, I promise.


Okay, first off go dry your eyes.

Now then, this one video holds a lot of meaning for me.  There's the power to help someone in need when we can, and the effect it can have.  But I'm here to focus on the very title of the video and this post.

Words hold more power than most of us realize.  As a writer, I understand this more than most.  What we say, what we post, what we write down in a letter, each word holds great magic in them.  The trick is using them right.

We always hear about how the wrong words can cause unmeasurable harm.  While very true, lost in that is the opposite.  The truth that words can bring just as much good too.  Thus what we say can easily turn someone's moment, mood, even life.

As an author, this is a responsibility I must and do take very seriously.  I often work on not just what to say, but how best to say it.  There's the old mantra "show, don't tell", but it's not always so easy.  How do I show it?  how do I covey the power of the moment to my readers?

You need only look above.  This woman said the same thing, but the way she said it conveyed so much more.  In one sentence, she was able to make a connection.  It triggers an immediate emotion from those who read it.  "You know, it is a nice day isn't it?"  Then they see the rest of it.  Instantly the mind works.  "Wow.  Poor guy.  Must be blind, which means he really can't see or enjoy this wonderful day.  I've got some spare change.  Maybe that will improve his day."  And for those of us watching, we get to see just how selfless and caring this one woman was.

All done in one sentence.

That my friends is awesome writing.  Conveying so much, so fast, and so completely.  And just look what it did!  Real or not, it created a moving moment that's been seen by 20 MILLION people.  Would it have gone that way had she simply dropped him a large check?  I doubt it.  Taken him someplace where he would get cared for?  Maybe, but I again suspect it wouldn't have hit so hard or so well.

Real or not, someone understands the true power words have in our world.  Writers of all kinds understand it.  It's how we do what we do.  But everyone should learn to use that power well.  If it could do that for a single blind man, how much more could we do with it?
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    "Be You"

    "Let your words be eternal yet time honored.  True yet not betraying.  Strong yet uplifting.  Challenging yet harmless.  But above all, let all you say, do, and be, remain forever and exclusively you."
    - Forest Wells

    A blessing, and perhaps a personal hope, for this blog and so much more.


    REMINDER: Blog is now on Wordpress. You can find it via the link below.
    https://forestwells.wordpress.com/2018/06/26/coming-soon-impressions/

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