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Bad Traits for Characters 2: From Mildly Annoying to Deal-Breaker, From This Makes for a Fine Villain to Let’s Put This Person to Jail Forever

Posted on August 9, 2016 Written by Pinar Tarhan

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This is a sequel to the post where I listed bad personality traits and flaws for your characters in any genre. The idea is to make our protagonists and supporting characters more human, especially if we are writing romances or romantic comedies.

That said, any traits can be combined, taken to the extreme and can be used for any genre and character, including your villains and antagonists. And remember, one person’s bad trait is a good one for another. That’s how we get conflicts, baby!

Let’s roll:

  • trigger-happy cop/agent
  • trigger-happy civilian
  • too flirty: the compulsive flirt who can’t stop even if they are in a committed relationship. It’s a reflex that annoys the hell out of their partner. Some of them will even act on it.
  • creepy/stalkerish
  • with inferiority complex
  • with superiority complex: These characters have inferiority complex, but mask it with narcisism.
  • indecisive about everything
  • petty
  • no common sense
  • entitled
  • constant victim mentality: loves (wrongly) blaming everybody and everything else
  • doesn’t know own limits
  • doesn’t respect others’ limits
  • kissass/ teacher’s pet/boss’ pet
  • stuck-up
  • square
  • not open to new experiences
  • too outdoorsy to the point you can’t plan an indoors event
  • dances all night vs. never, ever dances even on your birthday
  • criticizes anything and everything
  • criticizes you constantly
  • too pessimistic
  • too optimistic
  • too realistic
  • lives in fantasy world , never leaves vs. doesn’t have a fantasy world: no imagination
  • parental issues that prove Freud right
  • possessive/controlling
  • lazy
  • unstable/inconsistent/too unpredictable
  • too predictable
  • cranky
  • too snarky
  • too proud vs. no pride
  • bad drunk/always high/compulsive gambler/chain smoker
  • inarticulate
  • unhelpful
  • emotionally stunted/immature
  • relentless gossip – never says these to the person’s face
  • back-stabber/disloyal
  • only loyalty themselves
  • annoyingly blunt
  • no volume control/rowdy
  • impersonal
  • distant
  • cliché-ridden/tacky
  • paranoid/conspiracy-theorist
  • always anxious without an anxiety disorder
  • sponge/mirror: always resembles whoever they are with: mimics their personality
  • commitmentphobe vs. addicted to relationships/can’t be alone
  • doesn’t respect/give personal space
  • too flaky
  • horrible at grammar/always uses textese
  • glued to TV/smartphone/ipad/computer
  • obnoxious
  • hates traveling
  • ghoster: Instead of breaking up/rejecting properly leaves
  • can’t hold a job because of severe unprofessionalism
  • gaslighter

Filed Under: Fiction Writing, Inspiration and Motivation Tagged With: bad personality traits for fictional characters, personality trait ideas for fiction writers, writing fiction, writing realistic fiction

Bad Traits for Characters: From Mildly Annoying to Deal-Breaker, From This Makes for a Fine Villain to Let’s Put This Person to Jail Forever

Posted on July 25, 2016 Written by Pinar Tarhan

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After my romcom’s characters were criticized for being too nice by two different readers, I decided to make one big list of human flaws and bad traits. Some of them can be used to make your characters more human, and some might make them seem even less than.

It’s in no particular order, and I encourage you to add more in the comments, should you think of new ones. Remember, this list isn’t just for romcoms.

The traits are in no particular order: Some words might include others, like sociopaths don’t often have empathy, but being bad at empathy doesn’t necessarily make you a sociopath. And one person’s deal-breaker isn’t necessarily another’s.

Let’s roll:

  • mean/cruel/violent/abusive
  • psychopath
  • sociopath
  • compulsive liar/gambler
  • addict
  • stingy
  • overspender
  • arrogant
  • pushover
  • too shy
  • rude
  • elitist
  • not good at empathy
  • abuses privilege/unaware of privilege/looks down on those with privilege
  • racist
  • misogynistic
  • agist
  • homophobic
  • irrational
  • impulsive
  • too much of a planner: no time for spontaneity
  • politically incorrect
  • disrespectful
  • selfish
  • too selfless: ends up being miserable
  • forgetful
  • chronically late
  • obsessively organized/clean
  • excessively disorganized/messy/dirty
  • personal hygiene issues
  • prioritizing badly/wrongly: e.g. sports team/favorite show over relationship/friends
  • cheater
  • too ambitious vs. not ambitious enough
  • no goals
  • too self-conscious vs. totally unaware of self
  • obsessive in general
  • unsupportive
  • doesn’t believe in you
  • health nut
  • too unhealthy when it comes to habits/lifestyle
  • doesn’t believe in science
  • overtly religious
  • doesn’t respect your/others’ faith
  • xenophobe
  • insensitive vs. too sensitive
  • snob in their taste
  • doesn’t listen/bad at communication
  • doesn’t know what she/he wants
  • doesn’t give you space
  • ignorant
  • illiterate by choice
  • too serious: no time for fun/no sense of humor
  • sick sense of humor
  • always joking around/no time to be honest
  • fussy/nitpicky
  • too choosy
  • criminal – white collar
  • criminal – violent
  • doesn’t care about law
  • extreme chatterbox vs. too quiet
  • shrill voice
  • too adventurous vs. not adventurous enough
  • boring
  • too geeky vs. no knowledge of any kind of pop culture
  • doesn’t care about how they look
  • care too much about how they look
  • baby-fever: to the point who the baby will be from doesn’t matter
  • marriage-obsessed: to the point the person doesn’t matter
  • hung-up on ideas/ideals rather than evaluating the individual
  • not individualistic enough/always following the crowd
  • antisocial
  • bad with/rude to your friends/family
  • doesn’t involve you in their life
  • wants to change you
  • wants you to change them: sees you as an anchor/savior
  • doesn’t apologize/doesn’t admit they are wrong
  • always right
  • thinks fighting spices things up
  • expects more than gives
  • dangerous/endangering
  • risk averse vs. always taking risks
  • judgmental
  • too jealous
  • too sarcastic
  • too stupid
  • shallow/superficial
  • doesn’t return what he/she expects/gets from you
  • cares too much about what others think
  • superstitious
  • too nosy

Filed Under: Inspiration and Motivation, Writing Tagged With: bad personality traits for fictional characters, personality trait ideas for fiction writers, writing fiction, writing realistic fiction

How to Handle The Negativity Toward Your Writing No Matter The Source

Posted on July 18, 2016 Written by Pinar Tarhan

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Let me be honest: People will react negatively to your writing. It doesn’t really matter what you write, or how you write it, although some topics and publications will gather more negativity than others.

I’m not talking about the rejections you’ll get, but rather how people will respond after you have your piece accepted and published. Some commenters confuse honesty with rudeness. Some won’t read or try to understand the whole piece. People who don’t or won’t try to empathize. People who believe one’s thoughts and tastes can be more important than your own experience, or somehow it can override what you have been through.

From insults to my writing and understanding, from the validity of my tastes (which is an oxymoron) to my authority, I’ve had my share of negative reactions and comments.

For some people, it’s just the way they are. Their talents for empathy have been reduced to zero, no doubt with the help of online anonymity and sense of security it provides.

The best way is to ignore, despite how hard it is. It might be selfish of me, but I remind myself that it happens to every writer. Sometimes I even read a comment or two on another writer’s post to prove my own point. And I always get proven.

The writer can be the most established, logical and helpful expert on the topic, and she will have to face negativity just the same.

The more controversial or unique your idea, the more nerves it will strike. But instead of doubting the value of your writing, you should pat yourself on the back. Because face it, it’s the degree of difference, the unique slant you brought to an otherwise familiar topic that got you paid and published.

Then there is another secret enemy you might have to face: You. You know the person who turns down so many ideas and pieces because they seem crappy, no good enough, already done, “insert any negative adjective here…..” You have to learn to ignore that voice too. Before you can have negative reactions to your published piece, you have to have pieces published. I’m not saying don’t do your best. You have to. But you also have to leave panicking and perfectionism behind to get ahead in your writing career.

For instance, your idea/post might seem very mundane. Or not a good fit. Like who cares if you don’t drink and it has nothing to do with religion? Or if you are a childless writer and/or is an only child and want to write for a parenting publication about it. Guess what? One writer’s non-drinking and the reactions she got ended up as a personal essay on Slate, and a writer’s thoughts on being an only child was published by Babble.

Guess what? I rarely drink, and I’ve been deemed as a weirdo almost all my life because of it. I’m also an only child who has no kids, and I feel overwhelmed by the number of publications I can’t seem to write for.

So just put yourself and ideas out there. Pitch well, pitch often, and you’ll see that you will start gathering bylines and paychecks with a smile on your face.

Back to the “enemies” outside:

Of course sometimes, your job includes responding to comments. The good news is, it is often required by smaller blogs who don’t receive that many comments or blogs with a strict commenting policy. You know the editor or blogger will protect you from vicious attacks, or they will erase those comments before they reach your eyes. The Establishment, for instance, doesn’t allow comments on their pieces.

Some healthy discussion and opposition are generally encouraged, and you can handle this with grace. Just try to see where the commenter is coming from, and keep things professional. As long as both sides are polite and respectful, even agreeing to disagree ends up being fun.

If you feel exposed and unsafe, immediately contact the editor and let them you don’t feel comfortable with the way people are treating you. Take a screenshot of some of the comments. Your editor is only human, and there is a chance they missed or overlooked some nasty stuff. They will most likely act accordingly and warn or ban the commenter.

If they don’t have your back, tell them you are only comfortable interacting with the polite ones, and it is your right to expect basic manners. You might rethink your arrangement with this client however. Even if you keep writing for them, renegotiate your job description and accept you can’t, you won’t, and you shouldn’t try to please everyone. You need to keep your target audience in mind, but when a post is well-written and SEO-optimized, it will catch more eyeballs – some of them who don’t agree with you on anything. And this is fine.

Good luck, and don’t despair. I’ve been there, and so have most writers. We have each other’s backs.

If you need a mentor, I offer coaching services. I’ve been published on The Washington Post Solo-ish, Creative Class, Be a Freelance Blogger, Brazen Blog and WOW! Women on Writing among others. I also dream of conquering Hollywood, so your big dreams and goals won’t faze me.

If you found this post helpful, please spread the word around.

Filed Under: Blogging, Inspiration and Motivation Tagged With: how to handle negative people, how to handle negativity in writing, how to handle negativity toward your writing, writing

Recently Published, Pitched, Read & Watched: Updates for the Week

Posted on May 2, 2016 Written by Pinar Tarhan

Freelance Writer, hard at work
Me, hard at work at my favorite coffee shop.

This has been a busy few days. I’ve reevaluated my blogging goals, recovered from the latest bout of my capricious gastritis and collected three rejections. Since it was three rejections for three different stories, there’s a lot of hope on the horizon.

For one thing, I took a leap in trying to break into three publications I’ve not been published on before. I also went about discovering two great books, two interesting movies and got published on Write Naked.

Below are my notes on them. Read on and see if they might also catch your fancy.

(P.S. I used affiliate links in my post, so if you purchase from those, I make a little money at no extra cost to you.)

Non-fiction:

The Art of Creative Thinking by Rod Judkins, but I’ll be coming back to that book again and again. Stay tuned because I’ll be reviewing the book here soon.

I also loved and will keep with me for a long time:How to Do It All: The Revolutionary Plan to Create a Full, Meaningful Life — While Only Occasionally Wanting to Poke Your Eyes out with a Sharpie by Linda Formichelli. Again, the review is in the works.

Image via The Renegade Writer.
Image via The Renegade Writer.

I’m reading Better than Before by Gretchen Rubin and loving it.

Yes, if there is a fun, well-written and practical non-fiction book that covers creativity, productivity and time-management while keeping potential personality quirks in mind, I’m game.

Fiction: The Widow by Fiona Barton

The Widow, Fiona Barton

Wow, this book was dark and depressing. Sure, it was engaging, but I don’t want to keep it. I don’t want to revisit or reread.

Apparently there are comparisons to Gone Girl. I only watched the movie and read the screenplay, but I can tell you that Gone Girl is not that depressing. Maybe because it doesn’t involve child abuse, kidnapping and potential child murder.

The Widow tells the story of Jean, a woman who remains the center of media attention after her husband, suspected child abuser/kidnapper/killer is killed in an accident. Did she really know her husband? Was he really guilty? And was she a part of it?

While the book isn’t as gory as Gone Girl, it’s definitely darker, and it’s enough to put off reading certain thrillers for a while. So do I recommend it? You decide.

Recently Watched and Enjoyed: Mr. Right, Cube

I’ve watched two movies: one to study, one for absolute pleasure.

Cube: In the name of studying screenwriting

Cube movie poster
Cube poster via wikipedia.

Cube was for studying mystery/sci-fi plot as it is famous for its low-budget, as well as original and captivating plot. While it’s not too gory on the whole, it has a few scenes that are not for the faint-hearted.

Was the plot as amazing as I heard? Well, yes. However, the acting was uneven, and *spoilers*, if you want a solid reason/purpose for the cube, you are in for disappointment. But it’s worth your time if you know that going in. I had fun, but I prefer movies whose plots have better reasons than “it’s the way it is.” (More on Cube in later posts.)

Mr. Right starring Sam Rockwell and Anna Kendrick: For Fun

Mr. Right movie poster

Don’t be fooled by the name. Mr. Right is a usually hilarious and absurd romantic comedy, crime comedy and action comedy movie where a reformed hitman falls for a girl with issues, and together they form the perfect couple.

But of course she will have to deal with his “job,” and the men after him for different reasons. The hitman is Sam Rockwell, and the girl of his dreams is played by Anna Kendrick. If you love Rockwell like I do, it’s a must. His action/dancing scenes are my favorite, as well as most of his lines.

Of course given how many genres it’s tackling, it’s a bit uneven, illogical and strange. I loved it, but don’t be disappointed by wanting a straightforward romantic comedy or action comedy. Also, almost all characters are crazy.

You’ve been warned.

Recently Published:

Well, it’s not all rejections. I’m proud to say I’ve been published on one of my favorite blogs, Tara Lynne Groth’s Write Naked. Check out my tips on how not to make social media mistakes as a writer, and stay for other posts. It’s an invaluable resource for writers.

**

That’s it. Please share this post if it inspired you to read, watch and/or pitch.

What have you watched, read, pitched and published this week?

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Filed Under: Blogging, Inspiration and Motivation, Productivity & Time Management, Recommended Resources, Writing Tagged With: anna kendrick, better than before, better than before gretchen rubin, cube, cube movie, fiona barton, gone girl, gone girl movie, gretchen rubin, how to do it all, linda formichelli, mr. right, mr. right movie, pitching, rejection, sam rockwell, social media mistakes writes should avoid, social media tips for writers, tara lynne groth, the widow, the widow by fiona barton, write naked

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