Qwiller Writing Room

Each week we give you writing activities based on a particular genre and invite you to share your writing with us to read, comment on, be inspired by and enjoy.

This is a place for all to share their stories.


Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Sharing Stories

In our writers’ group a member suggested we complete a writing activity that she learnt at the Grass Roots Writer’s Festival in Bellingen this year. In this activity you tell a dramatic story to a partner and they write the story for you. In other words, you hand over your story to someone else and see what they do with it. 

It is interesting to see your own story transform into something else. In some ways it is easy to write someones else's story as you already have a plot set out for you. I found it easy to fictionalise my partner’s story as I imagined what happened.

What to do?

With a partner share a dramatic moment that contains an emotional trigger. As you listen to your partner’s story, keep in mind that you will be writing this story. You can fictionalize this story or keep to the exact details as they are relayed to you. You can also write in any genre you choose.

An example

Out of respect for the privacy of my partner’s story, I won’t relay the details she told me, but I will say that it was about an incident that brought a lot of grief into the family.

Dad sat me and my brothers around a pile of sticks and wood he had gathered from the outskirts of the house around our farm. The sun was setting and light flickered off his face, highlighting the sweat that dripped onto the wood like a leaking tap. On the horizon a wallaby stood watch, like a leader in an aboriginal ceremony.

‘Stay here,’ my father spat at us. ‘Missy, you look after your brothers now. I’ll be back.’ He seemed to glide back toward the house, which was behind us.

As soon as he left my brothers became restless and stood up looking for something to do. I knew that their movement away from the pile would unsettle the careful plan my father had concocted as a way of relieving the sorrow that had descended on the house.

I took out two lollipops my mother had given me as a prize for cleaning the dishes seven days in a row and resentfully handed them over to my brothers.

‘You must stay here,’ I demanded. ‘Sit’.

Content with their sweets, they sat and began their feast. That should keep them busy for a while, I thought, looking over my shoulder, wondering when my father was coming back.

I could see my father returning with a wheelbarrow overflowing. It was only as he came closer that I could make out the contents. It became clear to me what this special bonfire was really about. I could see the remnants of my baby brother’s possessions¾nappies, hand-me-down toys and Bonds playsuits. My father picked up each item and carefully placed them in between the bits of sticks and wood so that eventually the colourful pieces dotted the pile like a chocolate cookie with smarties. He removed an old newspaper from under his arm and scrunched up pieces of paper and inserted them underneath.

I became transfixed by a rubber doll that sat on top of the pile and I wondered how it got there. It was my favourite toy as a child. It had been mixed up with my brother’s toys and now its rubbery skin was about to melt in the funeral fire. I was horrified and felt to stand up to recue it, but the intensity of my father’s face, who was now standing with a fiery piece of newspaper, stopped me in my tracks. We watched the pile catch fire in one ferocious blast. The flames flickered in and out of each other, growing towards the sky as if competing to be the first to reach the clouds. Still I could see the creamy body of my doll morphing into half cooked biscuit batter. Still I could see the doll’s black eyes staring up into the heart of the flames, as the wallaby kept a restful vigil.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/elentir/3663267501