Your personality type impacts on what you do. Everyone has a preferred mode of operation that they use. Over time, with some self reflection and life experience, we can regulate our reactions to situations better - overriding our natural instinct.
I have studied the Meyers Briggs personality types in depth and find them extremely accurate for judging a person's reactions and preferences in given situations.
When I was developing my character profiles, I decided to give my MCs Meyers Briggs personality types so I could use my knowledge to accurately portray their actions and reactions.
For example, I made Mishca an ENFP (Extrovert, iNtuitive, Feeling, Perceiving). In layman's terms this means she likes being around people as it energizes her, she prefers the big picture to detail, makes decisions with her heart over her head and is a fly-by-the-seat-of-my-pants kinda girl. However, in times of crisis she reverts to the opposite mode, is withdrawn, focused and rigid - but will explode if pushed.
Knowing her personality type helped me judge if the progression of Mishca's journey was realistic for someone with that personality type - and I found it was. People seem to think she has too cool a head for someone about to have a heart transplant operation, but she turns logical and withdrawn to cope with the stress. After the operation, when her stress settles down, Mishca reverts to her rash happy-go-lucky persona.
If you are interested in using this system to help with your character development then here are some free tools and reference sites:
http://www.humanmetrics.com/cgi-win/jtypes2.asp
http://www.personalitypathways.com/type_inventory.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myers-Briggs_Type_Indicator
The first site includes a free mini test. I highly recommend that you take the test, find out your type AND read the material related to your type as a starting point. You can even get friends and family to take the test too to help you understand personality type dynamics.
The last thing a good writer wants is a Mary-Sue character (a boring MC with no flaws) so mapping out their character traits and including their personality type might help you create three dimensional characters that audiences can connect with.
Showing posts with label Mishca. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mishca. Show all posts
Friday, July 16, 2010
Sunday, July 11, 2010
Mishca's heart is not her own
Mishca is a speculative fiction, with a nice dash of mystery and humour, crossing over the realms of the paranormal, sci-fi and fantasy. It brings a new twist, with themes, beings, and creatures that are not a part of current 'trends' and a fresh original voice.
Mishca should have it all, being adopted by celebrity parents. But she is no Nicole Richie. Her poor health has hampered her ability to make friends and is a turn-off for boys. After graduating high school she undergoes a lifesaving heart transplant operation. But this new heart seems to come with consequences. Nightmares begin to plague Mishca, and she begins to wonder about her birth parents, something that had never bothered her before. Unbeknown to Mishca, strangers who are haunting her in dreams are also watching her movements in the real world.
The quest to find her birth parents leads her to Ryder, a fellow adoptee who seems to get Mishca on a level no-one else has before. Her health and inexperience does not faze him and their romance begins to blossom. Her journey into womanhood, her new life at university, and her relationship with Ryder take unexpected twists that ultimately lead to the shocking discovery about the truth of her past.
Currently, Mishca's manuscript is on HarperCollins review desk after recently ranking second out of more than twenty-five thousand projects on their online community, InkPop, for aspiring YA authors. While HarperCollins is reviewing, they will be considering it for publication. ttp://inkpop.com/projects/18350/mishca-/
The idea for Mishca came to me as a "What if?" scenario. To not give away the twist the best example I could give is "What if a time traveller met herself in another time?" As I researched and wrote the story expanded further and subplots developed for other characters. While it could be work as a stand alone story, it is designed to be the opening book of a series that explores the themes of heritage, belonging, atonement, forgiveness and love.
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