Wow! I can honestly say without doubt that this is the worst Friday I have had all year, and possibly for several years. I mean, yesterday was kind of sketchy - my health was doing some stuff that it shouldn't have, but I made it past that and actually ended up feeling a sense of gratitude. Well, that was probably my first mistake because Friday must've got wind of it and decided to put me square in my place. I got to drive from place to place where I would then walk a total of five miles in the really humid air this morning, only to have my car break down just before the end of this trip. Of course, this means I had to walk home, finish my route on my bicycle, get a jump for the car (failed), get it towed (expensive), get it diagnosed (another nightmare), get a rental, and all in the equatorial heat. Add to this, I actually had things to do today - so much for that. Yep, this Friday is the worst. Or as the joke goes, it's only the worst Friday so far.
Now, did I choose to make my Friday post a piece demonstrating how to rant about a bad day? There's a hint of that, but it's more elaborate than that. When we write about a character and their adventure (at least in fiction), we have to remember that elements such as drama, suspense, tension, etc. are more than just things we need to include because they're required. We do our readers a horrible injustice if we don't really make the readers feel what the character is going through. And we do this by the simple route of making things worse.I offer this simple, though somewhat gross, example of a character faced with a terrible choice. For whatever reason, the character accidentally drops a quarter in the toilet. Immediately this creates a dilemma - pursue the quarter and deal with the uncomfortable repercussions, or let it go and be one quarter poorer? Interesting discussion, but most of us would've walked away, high and dry. So let's pile on the costs of the lost money. What if it wasn't a quarter, but a dollar bill? A five-dollar bill? A twenty? The character's last bit of pocket money - the twenty he kept in his wallet for emergencies? Now it isn't as easy. What if the toilet is really dirty? I mean, post-apocalyptic bus-stop restroom dirty. Now what? Recover that twenty, wash your hands vigorously afterward, and try to put that nasty twenty back in your wallet and pretend you never knew where it had been? Dropping a quarter in the toilet is nothing now. Your last twenty bucks... and let's say you're twenty miles from home without a cell phone. Now what?
Piling on the problems is definitely a mean thing to do to a person, but fortunately, a written character can handle it so go ahead. And of course, it doesn't have to be the obviously gross outcome that's the challenge - just something the character does not want to face. Maybe it's a starving person living in Chicago who is given a hot dog WITH KETCHUP ON IT! People will have their opinions about that, but the conflict the writer gets to play with is the individual character's dilemma.
The long and short of it is simple: when you give a character a challenge, make it worth something. Make it hurt. Pile on the grief. Maybe that ketchup thing was an out-of-bounds move, but you get the idea. Piling on quandaries and consequences wakes the reader to the character's challenge, and invests them in the result. So go ahead and pile on when you want - the character can take it.
And check your car battery in the summer - they can burn out just as easily.