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:
Consider the question, Who are you? In your mind’s eye, ask it of this figure.
Consider the idea that no one can fully tell the story of who they are, not having been present at the scene of their beginnings, not having language for the early years, those beginnings anyway activated by and held in the actions of others, everyone in relation to someone else—we cannot ever fully narrate what brought us into being or draw a hard perimeter around our self-understanding of how we came to be who we are.
With your figure in mind, imagine a scene in which your figure encounters the limits of their own self-knowledge—an encounter with an opacity or an indebtedness around a beginning (possibly but not necessarily taking “beginning” as infancy, could be of any point of beginning or early transition). What could occasion such an encounter? What others do they identify as being there, populating this opaque place? Imagine your figure in that moment. What is it like to be near them?
Write a short piece as a holding place for this presence that combines portrait and text.