Describe your character(s)' thoughts and emotions.![Descriptive Descriptive](http://static3.mbtfiles.co.uk/media/docs/newdocs/gcse/english/english_language/writing_to_inform_explain_and_describe/851605/images/preview/img_218_1.jpg)
![Nightmare descriptive writing worksheets Nightmare descriptive writing worksheets](http://www.markedbyteachers.com/media/docs/newdocs/gcse/english/english_language/writing_to_inform_explain_and_describe/114647/images/full/img_cropped_1.png)
![Descriptive Descriptive](http://static3.mbtfiles.co.uk/media/docs/newdocs/gcse/english/english_language/writing_to_inform_explain_and_describe/851605/images/preview/img_218_1.jpg)
How would you describe waking up in the morning, describing it bit by bit? When writing a fictional nightmare, how realistic is it to dream about a past trauma. The point of this thread, the direct question I was pondering, was how to tell a first person narrative when the narrator is unreliable or not fully conscious. In other media like TV, it's easy to show blurry vision, choppy images, jumbled noises, noises either too soft or too loud. For our media, writing.
[5] Allowing the reader insight into your character(s) will make them empathize more with the character and feel more connected to them. Talk about how the events of the story make them feel. How do they change emotionally because of what happens to them and what they make happen because of that?![Nightmare descriptive writing worksheets Nightmare descriptive writing worksheets](http://www.markedbyteachers.com/media/docs/newdocs/gcse/english/english_language/writing_to_inform_explain_and_describe/114647/images/full/img_cropped_1.png)
- For example: Mary might be feeling horrified by the explosion in the forest, because she's dedicated her life to preserving forest habitat, or because one of her friends is near the center of the explosion. Maybe she's devastated because of the explosion, or angry. Or horrified, devastated, and angry.
- Reflect how their thoughts and emotions change over the course of the story. You don't want a static character who does not change at all, neither do you want a character who changes in completely nonsensical ways. For example: Mary might start of the story ashamed that she did not stand up against the people who created the explosion, and over the course of the narrative develop strength and courage that allows her to defeat the bad guys.[6]