crackerjackjoe ([info]crackerjackjoe) wrote,
@ 2005-04-28 11:30:00
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Writing Squick and Fear
I started thinking about this while critiquing a scary shorty story.

Not scary or squicky to read about.
Thunderstorms.
Ghosts.
Blood & guts.
Villians. They make me mad.

Actually having these happen to me would probably be a different story. Next time I meet Darth Vader on a dark and rainy night, I'll let you know how it went.

Very scary & squicky
Symptom descriptions (especially knee, joint stuff) Sometimes it is called medical student syndrome, when you read about descriptions of symptoms and you feel them youself. Also called sympathetic symptoms. Even a vague description of someone's knee caps being shot makes me want to sit down.

Dealing with strangers is scary, but reading about just strangers isn't as big a deal as reading about someone deal with strangers in the awkward and clunky way that I'm afraid that I would. Some comedies that rely on humiliation as a gag fail on me for that reasons. I've read social anxiety has it's roots in the subsystem of all mammalian brains that make them skittish around others. It makes sense because animals that are universally friendly, including friendly to predators have all been eatten, leaving only those with tendancies to social anxiety.

I can tell you now that when Darth Vader takes insult to my awkward introduction and slices through my knee caps with a light saber, I will be really squicked.



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[info]whytcrow
2005-04-28 08:24 pm UTC (link)
Very interesting. Writing about blood and guts squicks me a bit more than reading about it, but I do have a very low threshold. Also, it is less blood and more with other inner bits. It can be weird; one thing can bug me a lot while something else seemingly less disturbing can send me off. Frex, I can watch ER (well, ER when the writing didn't suck so bad as to count as torture), with just looking away now and again. But CSI, the two times I tried to watch it, had me turning the channel in less than 5 minutes.

I always find it fascintating about what some people are scared of and what they aren't. The Kid, when he was a wee thing, was absolutely convinced that there were monsters everywhere. In my car, in the trees, in his closet. This didn't frighten him, because he was going to beat them all up. And yet thunderstorms make him nervous even now. (Must be because you can't punch a lightning bolt in the nose).

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