What—beyond the face of another (whether present or projected)—creates the conditions for me to sustain the work of telling the story of who I am? What kind of holding makes it possible for me to investigate, to answer deeply? What kind of call invites me to speak?
Conjure a figure in mind, their presence felt as a push or pull on another or on many others.
With your figure in mind, build the conditions they need to tell the story of who they are. Be the “you” to your figure’s “I.” Create an invitation; help the story expand. What do you need to do (as both author and interlocutor) to keep your figure moving forward in their story? What is it like to be with them as they tell it?
Perhaps add a consideration today, of the idea that even if your figure is speaking to a fictional other in a fictional world, you, the author, are also building an I-you relationship with this figure, that the writing you’re doing is a further space made in which to receive them—a wider circumference around the fictional scene. Even if you are writing of a real person, you are re-conjuring them through an act of your imagination, drawing a narrative scene but also registering their presence in your own body as you write.
Write a short piece that makes space for this presence combining portrait and text.