I am telling a story about myself, attempting to tell the truth. But the form of the story pulls me into its own needs: for pattern, for coherence, for continuity. This coherent, continuity-possessing heroine is someone I am imagining for myself, even as I tell about her. Perhaps this is an occasion for me to change my life, to become her. Have I ruined the truth of my own story by allowing this narrative self to charm me? If this narrative self isn’t entirely true, is there a different kind of truth that pushes through my telling when the seamlessness of my story is interrupted, perhaps by my own lack of knowledge about what makes me who I am, my beholdeness to a social world that extends far beyond me?
Conjure a figure in mind, their presence felt as a push or pull on another or on many others.
With this figure in mind, tell their story. Give them coherence, continuity, make them legible. Then invite this figure to stage an interruption to your biography of them. Invite them to wreck or destabilize it in some way. You might dramatize this, so that the interruption takes place within the thought experiment of a fiction. Or you might experiment with the possibility that they interrupt you, the writer, that their wrecking intervention is on the page and in the sentence. Or any point in between those two possibilities. Either way, try to stay tuned on their presence when they appear—presence as something different than the figure they are in their story.
Stage the thought experiment above in writing. Either let that stand as your day’s writing, and now insert in some way a portrait, or treat the thought experiment as prewriting and now write a short piece as a holding place for their presence that combines portrait and text.