Following on yesterday’s prompt, embrace the term emergence as a way to relieve the endpoint-oriented pressure of direction implied by development, and instead consider the possibility of encountering a written character’s emergences freed from a timeline, so that the endpoints of age and death are no longer the implied endpoints of this character’s narrative presence.
(Is it possible in narrative to decouple character from a the bodily existence in time that is the condition of any actual person? What would it mean for a character to exist meaningfully in narrative without reading that character as change over time toward death? It flies in the face of good sense but it also reminds me of something I recall a professor of mine back in phd school saying about Tristram Shandy, that over the winding course of the whole thing everyone died, but also came back to life, that the book was a way to gather them all back, to rebut the timeline of living and dying.)
Conjure a figure in a scatter of moments without imposing a hard interior consistency on them; don’t ask your figure to settle, as if change found its destination and then stopped. But do choose one consistent element for this scatter to be contained by: a particular place. Write a short piece as a holding place for this scatter, combining portrait and text. Maybe write each sentence on its own card to form a small deck that can be reshuffled before each reading, so that the narrative order is never definitive.