LOL in 2 ways.
1) All the time :D
In fact, it's how I first got into writing... I wanted more of the story, or hated the ending (beginning, middle, etc.), or in some other way was either excited by or dissatisfied wih the story presented... so I rewrote the sucker. It's also what made me a halfway decent investigator; being able to see that there would be "more" of the story elsewhere, and able to think of different ways to get that information (who else to talk to, where else to go, trails to follow, leads to track down, etc.). Writing is a pure relief because it means "God Mode Activated". ;) In real life, one will never know the entire story, however the joygasmic aspect of real life is that truth is far stranger than fiction! People are amazing.
2) Probably more in line with what you're actually thinking of? I'm dead. Yep. There, too. Dead. Aaaaand dead. Oh! I'm dead again! :banghead: When I watch a film of nearly any kind? I'm not the hero who survives everything. Opening battle scene of Band of Brothers on the beaches at Normandy? Yep. That's me dead on the boat, then dead in the water, then dead on the sand, then... Each and every single moment where "other people" are dying in films and shows, while the heroes move on? In my head I'm dead. Over. And over. And over. When I get in this kind of headspace I have to quit watching stuff, because I cannot suspend disbelief. (That I would actually still be alive to be learning what happens the rest of the movie.) It's far from the greatest movie of all time, but The Edge of Tomorrow has become one of my favorite movies of all time... Just because the character dies. Over. And over. And over. And over again!!! :roflmao: I laughed so hard -in pure relief- just because that's what my head does; and there I'm dead again! That I actually did survive my own life somehow (so far :shifty: ) doesn't seem to enter in. All I can see are 1,000 ways to die... And in a film, I'm dead in all of them :wtf: Vexing.