How can I tell of a man of good character?
Would I need 2 know a actual good person, 2 base my example of a 'good' person on?
Will the religious 'right' create controversy if I dare'da follow a religious example, like the Buddha, the famous teacher central 2 Buddhism? [Pronounced: Bu-dis-em]
Does an individual attempt at trying 2 be a 'good-person' cause anger in Christians...?
...Or am I stereotyping Christians...placing them in a narrowly-defined box of behavior?
Do Christians really insist that all people who want 2 be 'good' act like Jesus...as they gather 2 witness a cross-nailing?
Are their Christians who allow individuals 2 follow other religious teachers, allow them 2 start families, write poetic lines about their inspiration, or visit family temples?
Do Christians allow individuals 2 have 'other ideas' of the type of person of 'good' character they wish to be?
From Being M@del 2 Being Good...what would such talk of 'goodness' mean without actual examples in life 2 reflect upon in writings?
I think I will need 2 reviuw the definition for concrete.
Concrete: An actual Object found in the physical world.
(not abstract).
When I refer 2 a fictional character...what am I referring 2...my own day-dreams?
I think fictional characters are in the 'Grey-zone'...like reflections in a mirror...like shadows on the wall...like gray smoke...they are semi-tangible.
A fictional character, 2 my mental frame, has a location. Most descriptions of them exist in the 'flatlands'...a literary reference 2 "Flatland," which has amuse'da many readers.
Fictional characters have location, and behaviors...'habbits' or 'characteristic' that can be described.
Fictional characters in a novel, may be similar to actual people...yet they are more similar 2 paiper flowers, or photographs.
I desire 2 write about 'father-figures' who bring order 2 their family, and 2 their neighborhood. I hope 2 write about the types of males I like, by describe'in their behavior.
The character "Granpah" is a 'generic' character I want 2 write about for a short-story. I think he should be warm, and golden-brown. A friendly character in a literary town.
Writers write about the behaviors, and emotions of their fictional characters, 'texty characters' who thinks and seem 2 acts in a similar way 2 people in the physical world...yet, although I write 2 better reflect...like visiting the mountain 2 look down upon my personal problems...I also write 2 instruct. Like a computer-programmer who writes lines of code...the computer is a machine that follows
\\ { the text code... \\
with evidently behavior.
Fictional characters in a novel, may be similar to actual people...yet they are more similar 2 paiper flowers, or photographs.
Sidenote: Online, there are people who teach other people how 2 create faces of people who do not exist...it is not about copying a photograph...it is about taking certain distinct characteristics, and 'artificially-merging' the image with the image of another person.
The end result should be a image of a person who does not exist...yet looks human.
Art, photography...paiper-back novels...these ARTS are reflections, or abstract creations created 2 amuse, entertain...or 2 confuse.
Confession: After meeting several young actors, I MUST INFORM every reader...FAMILY IS MOST IMPORTANT.
IT IS NOT RIGHT for a writer 2 carelessly hire Actors...in today's world...when you expose young people 2 a large-market, you change their life.
Several women had their lives change'da...
For example, Joni Mitchell had her life change'da by a bus ticket and a guitar. Women who would normally have been great mothers, became great independent Artists...this is both wonderful and sad.
Writers are more 'part-of-the-package' and less solitairy beings in control of their own paiper-nahveil-verse, when they bring their literary products 2 the TV, use Windows from their PC, or stage.
Writers, Actors, and Musicians work in the field of Art...and are part of their families...and most want 2 start their own families.
If a Artist values Art more than Family, I blaime THE ART TEACHER!
No comments:
Post a Comment