Conjure a figure in mind, their presence felt as a push or pull on another or on many others.
As a way into thinking about this presence:
Start with the question, Who are you? In your mind’s eye, ask it of this figure.
Consider the idea that one can only tell one’s life story to another. That there is no understanding an “I” outside of being addressed by another, even if that other is only a hypothetical audience. Consider further that this situation—of being addressed and addressing ourselves in turn—structures the story of ourselves that we can tell and so the way we understand the question of who we are.
Imagine a scene in which your figure in some way tells the story of who they are to another. What occasions this story? What possibilities for self-understanding are formed in the relationship between your figure and their audience? What is it like to be near your figure as they tell their story?
Write a short piece as a holding place for this presence that combines portrait and text.