C. J. Winters

Writing the Paranormal

by
C. J. Winters

Where do ideas come from?

Imagination, you say. Sure, but what fires the imagination?

A comment.

An experience.

A dream.

A news report.

A pet's adoring gaze.

A piece of driftwood.

Free-association.

And, rarely, a bolt from the blue. An image, a thought or a sensation that smacks your conscious mind with "Hey, listen up!" urgency.

However and whenever a story idea strikes, treat it as a gift, because that's what it is. Respect it. Nurture it. Invite it to expand and carry you forward, upward, and even into a realm you may never have considered.

Paranormal subjects cover the earth and extend past the stars. Time-travel. ESP. Ghosts. Otherworldly creatures such as goblins, fairies, werewolves, monsters and shape-shifters.

If you have never written a story with paranormal elements, but are interested in such a project, begin with a visit to the library.

Go to the parapsychology and metaphysics sections where you will discover various telepathic techniques, mystical revelations, and experts on every subject. Psychics who describe

attuning themselves to the delicate vibrations of spirit messengers. Dowsers who sense the presence of underground rivers through forked willow sticks. Palmists. Crystal ball gazers. Ghost hunters. Tarot card designs, layouts and interpretations.

You will also find volumes of historical folklore and novels featuring vampires, mermaids, elves and other mythic creatures.

Let your fingers (and intuition) walk the spines of such books until a title piques your interest. Gather an armload of such books and spend an evening perusing them. Some you may dismiss as silly; while others may draw you into their stories, their lore, their possibilities.

Even such light research will give you confidence and further stimulate your imagination. Let it roam...and watch for the reinforcement of synchronous events, indicating that you are on the springboard of your story.

You can gain plot mileage by considering the reactions of normal characters to paranormal characters and/or events. For example, the regular folks might be in denial, ignoring the obvious physical differences of the alien creature dropped into their midst, or offering such rationalization as "his mother must've taken drugs when she was pregnant."

Do not allow yourself to be imprisoned by the paranormal boundaries set by other writers. Develop your own guidelines for the possible and impossible in your story. Just be consistent. Keep a copy of your rules handy, and remain faithful to them. For example, some ghosts appear able to move physical objects, while others cannot. Most story ghosts readily pass through solid objects, but perhaps your ghost had drowned and now assumes she cannot move through water.

In a time-travel story the protagonist should not linger in disbelief of the setting; he has to accept his displacement in time for the story to progress. While your method of transportation-through-time will be unique to your story, the more logical you can make it the seem, the better the story will work. For example, if your character dives into a mountain lake in 2004, and emerges from the same lake in 1790, the physical transition makes fictional sense.

Magical beings, supernatural powers, and extraordinary gifts may assist your hero, but such advantages should not overwhelm the everyday folks in your story. Any hero must struggle and overcome great obstacles–perhaps physical, certainly mental and emotional--to achieve his goal, or there is no story.

If you can imagine such a story, you can write it, and your future writing will be all the richer for the experience.

©2005 C. J. Winters

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