I always thought I knew them inside out; the dark corners of
their less than idyllic childhoods; their lives before children; their hopes
and fears. I thought I understood exactly who they were and where they came
from.
Until last night.
After a pleasant family dinner I witnessed a conversation
between Mum and Nan (her mum) that has changed what I
thought I knew about why Mum is the way she is. And it knocked the wind out of
me.
Not the revelations themselves, so much, but the fact that I
had always so strongly (arrogantly?) believed I had my Mum’s motivations,
insecurities, lack of confidence all sussed out. And I was wrong!
I’ve always prided myself on ‘seeing through people’. On
understanding their behaviour. A great skill to have as a writer.
As a writer I can see through my characters’ motivations and
inspirations. Even when my characters surprise me, as they inevitably do, when
they take a twist I wasn’t expecting, I always understand how or why they take
that turn. That light bulb moment as my pen dances across the page and suddenly
Nicole zigs when I thought she would zag, and the voice in my head says ‘yes,
of course, that’s exactly what she’d do’.
As a daughter, evidently, my vision and understanding
aren’t quite as honed. I’m now seeing my Mum, and my Nan ,
in a very different light and my understanding of them has changed.
It’s never a bad thing to realize you don’t know everything.
It really isn’t ;). And this is a life lesson that I will take and try to apply
to all areas of my life. If I don’t know those closest to me as well as I
thought, then maybe when dealing with that rude shop assistant, or that mother
from school who boils my blood, or my in-laws who… (well let’s not get
personal!), I can just pause and consider maybe there’s something else going on
that I’m not aware of.
And I can certainly apply it to my writing. GO DEEPER! Just
when I think I know my characters inside out, I can dig a little further, peel
back another layer. There may be something hiding there I didn’t see before.
S
keep cahsing those pavements