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While I understand why this is being suggested here, it's *extremely* limiting to tell a writer to write *just* what they know. If we did that, there would be NO fantasy, very little fiction, and the writers who have researched and really tried to understand another viewpoint or opinion would be silenced. Not sure that is the way we grow, as people or a society.write about what you know.
Agree with you @whiteraven. Well said. I have a friend who is a writer and he takes classes and has won awards and in one of his classes one of their assignments was to specifically write from the perspective of someone completely unlike them. He researched with TED talks and then the only verification he had was reading it in front of his class.extensive research and someone familiar with whatever challenge it is following behind and verifying that it rings true at least to their experience.
It's not really that interesting to dissociate as you've probably done it yourself. Ever drive to work but can't remember the actual ride there because it was automatic. That's pretty boring stuff right? Ever look out a window and daydream about nothing? Again pretty boring stuff.I don’t have PTSD, and I’m trying to write a character that does. This character has to directly return to the source of trauma, and I want to make them dissociate accurately. How would I do that?
and a library card. Or amazon. Read Heller, read Vonnegut, read Hemingway. then give up because no one gets it like a true sufferer.More advice: Google is your friend. Use it.
I think you are right, but I have read a lot of his personal letters and many were to his editors and the idea was thrown around quite a bit by both. But on this subject, the man could be considered to be an authority although I doubt he ever spent a day and a night trying to get ashore with a marlin tied along side his small boat. But he wrote very little, every day, and learned early on to know when he was telling tales that weren't ringing true the next morning and out of sheer disdain for wasted time he stopped writing them. Even when it meant feeding his editors very meagerly, a bite at a time, a day at a time.I believe it was possibly Hemmingway that said it, and others here: write about what you know.
Definitely agree with the sentiment of your post, but for those of us with a dissociative disorder, it’s definitely not a ‘normal’ experience!It's not really that interesting to dissociate as you've probably done it yourself.