Writing Prompt: Take Your Characters on Vacation

The article Writing Prompt: Take Your Characters on Vacation appeared first on The Write Practice.

While many novels and stories are set in a vacation location, you can take your character on vacation just to see what they are made of. Vacation can be frightfully stressful and reveals much about us as people. It can do the same for your character. Try it out with this writing prompt.

Writing Prompt: Take Your Characters on Vacation

Vacation. Just thinking about it makes me exhale deeply, whether it’s relaxing on a beach, hiking on a mountain trail, or traveling on an exciting adventure. When we go on vacation, we want something specific from the experience.

But how many times have you been on a vacation that turned stressful due to people, miscommunication, or difficulty? It happens almost every time, and how we handle it reveals our often unstated expectations, as well as who we are as people.

The same is true for our characters. For this writing prompt, let’s take a character on vacation and see what they are made of.

Choose a destination

First, think about where your character would go on vacation for the time of year and stage of life. Where would he or she choose and why? The answer reveals clues to personality and worldview.

Some might stay home with the phone and internet off watching television. Others might book a cruise to the Bahamas. Some might pack up their camping supplies and head to the nearest woods.

The destination reveals so much about the character because it’s embedded with information. How much money do they have to spend on the trip? How much time can they take off work? Who will go with them? Why would they choose a cruise over a trip to Napa Valley?

Once you pick a destination, get more specific. If booking a cruise, which type and length? What time of year? If camping, how spare will their set up be? Will it all fit on their back or are they hauling a trailer and generator along?

All those specific details create a better picture of the character.

Choose expectations

Now that you know where your character is going, you can choose expectations. Everyone has expectations when they go on vacation, even when they’re implicit. In a story, we know that these expectations are not going to be met, at least not in the way the character hopes.

Is the character headed out on a cruise secretly hoping to have a fling at sea? Is the camper expecting to be alone and uninterrupted in the woods? Does the character who vacations at home hope no one realizes they are home?

Consider expectations on at least three levels: personal, social, and locational.

Personal expectations include how they want to feel (relaxed, exhilarated, peaceful, rested). Social expectations include the level and quality of interactions they expect to have with people. If the character hopes their family will get along perfectly on the trip, well, good luck.

Finally, what does the character believe or hope will happen because of the location of the vacation? My expectations of a tent in the woods are much different than for a balconied stateroom on a luxury liner.

Choose complications

Now for the fun part of this writing prompt: complications. (Note: in real life, this is not the fun part until you’re reminiscing a year later, still in disbelief.) If you’ve listed details about the character’s personal, social, and locational expectations, you have several points of entry to create complications and conflict for your story.

Depending on the length of your story, you can choose a complication for each of those three areas.

For example, maybe your character heads to the restorative woods to camp (locational) because they believe it will help them relax (personal), while they avoid people (social). To complicate it, have it rain, making all aspects of outdoors life more difficult, or send a bear after their food. Both of these complications make the location challenging.

If they’re trying to avoid people, his trip could be interrupted by an impromptu senior class camp trip, with the woods overrun by graduates disrupting their solitude and plans.

For our cruising friend, maybe money was an issue and they found a great deal on a last-minute cruise, hoping for a hot, young vacation fling to help them get over an ex. When they arrive at the boat, they discover it’s a granny fitness cruise and they’re the youngest by thirty years.

Choose complications that push the character’s emotional state to reveal who they are.

Make characters act their way home

If you’ve ever had your vacation expectations thwarted (and who hasn’t), then you know we all push through and return home better or worse for the experience. For your story, though, make sure your character fights against those complications before they pack up to come home.

The camper could stake out the campsite with rope to keep the wild kids at bay, or hike further into unknown territory to escape them, getting lost in the process. The cruiser could resolve to eat alone in their room and avoid all eye contact until a sassy grandmother latches onto them at the pool and follows them everywhere. How will they treat the woman? What will they do to make it through the vacation?

I have come home more than once from a trip feeling like I needed a vacation to recover from my vacation, and your character will likely feel the same way.

Have you ever had a stressful or unexpected vacation that would make for good fiction? Share in the comments.

PRACTICE

For today’s writing prompt, choose or create a character and take them on vacation. Choose a location, expectations, and complications.

For fifteen minutes, write one scene with your character on vacation and let us see him or her handling the conflict. Share your practice below and leave feedback for your fellow writers to encourage one another!

Enter your practice here:

The article Writing Prompt: Take Your Characters on Vacation appeared first on The Write Practice. The Write Practice – The Online Writing Workbook

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Author: Sue Weems