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Saturday, June 8, 2019

Stories We Tell Ourselves - #Memory #Craft #Fantasy #AmWriting

the storyteller
 Image by Khusen Rustamov from Pixabay

Fantasy versus reality. This is a recurring theme in our author discussions and blogs. As authors of erotica, do we have a responsibility to paint a somewhat realistic picture of the complexities of human desire? Or is our role to create engaging fictional worlds and people them with characters who have more and better sex than most of us actually experience? Should our BDSM stories portray the actual practices of the kink community, complete with negotiation and limits? Or should we allow ourselves to descend into dark fantasies of acts that might be risky, even physically impossible, because that's what pushes our buttons?

I don't intend to reopen this debate right now. Even if you're firmly in the “realism” camp, however, I'm sure you'll admit to consciously constructing your stories to enhance their emotional effect. You introduce elements of suspense. You gradually intensify conflict. Ultimately, you provide enough of a resolution to give readers a sense of closure. This is, after all, the role of the storyteller – to build a coherent whole out of an assortment of people, actions and events, a tale that will linger in the readers' (or listeners') minds and perhaps, change them.

We do this, often quite deliberately, when we write fiction. But what about autobiography or memoir?

Several years ago, I reviewed an anthology of “true sex stories”. Each author had written about some crucial erotic experience in her life, some encounter or relationship that had particular significance. The authors' accounts were well-crafted, diverse, and frequently hot. However, they were more or less indistinguishable from the fictional erotic tales that appear in so many collections from this same publisher. There was nothing about them that signaled that they were “true” or “real”. The tales had been subjected to the storyteller's craft smoothed, tailored, refined – turned into works of art.

Please understand, this is merely an observation, not a criticism. As I contemplate the so-called true stories in this book, though, I wonder whether the phrase is an oxymoron, whether “story” and “truth” (in the sense of actual experience) can ever coexist. “Story” by its very nature implies an intervention to turn raw phenomena into narration.

Of course, many erotic authors – myself included - mine their own histories as material for their fiction. Much of my work is to a greater or lesser extent autobiographical. A few tales (I won't say which ones) are nearly literal accounts. In every case, though, I've applied my storyteller's lens to the details of my real world erotic encounters – bringing some aspects into sharper focus while blurring others. Some alterations are intentional misdirections to protect the so-called innocent, but most have to do with whipping the tales into a more literary shape, transforming them from anecdotes to stories.

As I contemplated the phenomenon of the“true” collection described above, however, I realized that I do the same thing with supposedly accurate descriptions of my “real” life. Between Oh Get a Grip, my personal blog Beyond Romance, the ERWA blog, my publishers' blogs, and my frequent guest posts, I produce quite a lot of material about myself and my past. I know I'm writing for an audience, and, without really meaning to, I adapt my life story to fit my perceptions about what they'll find intriguing. At this point, it's practically second nature to tweak a detail here, neaten up an ending there, to heighten the emotional impact.

I'm a bit disturbed to note that in some cases, the stories I've told you are now the stories I remember. I am not sure I recall what actually happened, only what I've told you happened. In fact, some of my fictional tales, even the ones not intended to be “true”, feel just as real.

As psychologist Daniel Kahneman points out, direct experience is fleeting. Memory is an act of creation – or re-creation – an effort to enforce some order on the fragmentary impressions left by our senses. There's no guarantee that our recollections are accurate. In fact research has shown that they can be systematically manipulated by changing our foci of attention.

There are two ways to react to these findings. We can panic, as the supposedly solid ground of remembered experience turns to perilous quicksand. If we can't be sure about our own life histories, is there any certainty at all?

On the other hand, we can embrace our storytelling genius, our genetic predisposition to rearrange and restructure the world into some shape that makes sense, as a gift. We all tell ourselves stories and create realities – whether we call them fiction or not. That may be unsettling. But it's also a kind of magic.

5 comments:

Cathy Brockman said...

Very interesting. You make a good point. I think it is a good magic.

Larry Archer said...

Great post!

Lisabet Sarai said...

Thanks to both of you!

Fiona McGier said...

I've read about people like Marilu Henner, the actress from Taxi, who is a member of a very small world-wide group of people who remember every single moment of their lives. YUCK! I remember flashes, random images, from most of it, and have coherent, linear memories of only a few incidents, like my wedding day, and the days each of my kids were born. Most of life is boring repetition...wake up, eat, go to work, eat, come home, eat, relax, go to sleep...repeat as needed. Who wants to remember every minute of that??
I told my kids that you get through the boring repetitious part however you need to. I tell myself stories in my head, and that's why I'm an author. Then, if you're lucky, you have extremely GOOD experiences, that you will treasure. And of course, you will have extremely BAD experiences also...that you wish you could forget...like holding Dad's hand as he took his last breath...or hugging Mom right after her last breath. Those burn themselves into your memory. You hope that you ultimately, will have more good than bad...but we can't know ahead of time.

And even though I say I remember each moment, I'm sure part of my memories involve me supplying what my memory forgot...because, after all, I'm an author, and that's what we do. Great post! I'm trying to be present on-line more, since it's summer. Got to be here while I can, before the school year drags me away again!

Lisabet Sarai said...

Hi, Fiona! Thanks for visiting.

I agree, we probably forget a lot because it's fundamentally forgettable.

Hope you get some time to write during the school break.

xxoo

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