Life in progress

A Letter to my Main Character

8 Comments

Dear Stephen,

You were a magician before I ever met you. Nevertheless, I handed you your tricks; your wand, your cards and your bunnies to be pulled from hats.  It was serendipity that you met the love of your life. I didn’t expect you to show up any more than she did. But oh, how I discovered you. We discovered you.

I’ve seen you through many troubles, frights and flights, I watched you dance and fall in love, I saw your joy and your pain. You surprised me and you caused me grief. Most of all I saw you grow as a man. You blossomed before my very fingertips.

Now you have outgrown me. You’re ready to move on. Though perhaps we’ll meet again in another tale, I have to let you go. I am happy to say it was a natural break. You have a life to live that doesn’t need me to tell it.

For now.

Giving away your smile
Your precious crooked grin
Fills me with pride and sorrow
In almost equal measures

Selfish is the heart who won’t let go
Allowing your wings to spread
You don’t need me
Though I created you from scratch

Grown and changed
You look upon me now with love
For what I have given
You have given me much more in return

Sakurai as Stephen Dagmar

Unknown's avatar

Author: Linda G. Hill

There's a writer in here, clawing her way out.

8 thoughts on “A Letter to my Main Character

  1. frannystevenson's avatar

    This is so nice! I wrote a few days ago a post about what I felt meeting in flesh and bone a couple of characters I made up for my books! I understand what you mean and I’m totally pleased that there is someone else out there treating like real human beings her characters!

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  2. wilsonkhoo's avatar

    Just wondering, do you have like a separate character sheet, not part of the story but for your own research? I tried that approach, didn’t really like it, seems to be limiting.

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    • Linda G. Hill's avatar

      I didn’t start to delve into my characters too much until I was well and truly into the story. Then, when I eventually got to a point where I didn’t know enough about the character’s background to know what he/she would do naturally in a situation, I started then to write the character’s outline separately. So the short answer would be, yes. 😛

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  3. Devlin De La Chapa's avatar

    Beautifully penned. . .sigh. . .

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