Please read Writing About: A Disease or Disability, because some of the tips I gave on how to write about a character with a disease/disability can still apply for a character with a personality or psychological disorder.
Definition: a personality disorder is a deeply ingrained and maladaptive
pattern of thoughts, feelings, and behavior causing long-term difficulties in
personal relationships or in society.
*A personality disorder is not regarded as a mental disorder.
*A personality disorder is not regarded as a mental disorder.
Examples: antisocial
personality disorder, borderline personality disorder, narcissistic personality
disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), paranoid personality disorder, schizoid personality
disorder.
TIP: My advice is to already know which disorder you want your character to have, or to do research to find out which one you want to use in your book.
I have done a lot of research in psychology, so I want to
share with you some things I have learned:
·
We tend to blame our upbringing, childhoods,
and life experiences for the good and bad traits we have. (This can help you in
a story because your character could blame a dysfunctional family or a
traumatic event from their past for their behavior.)
·
People raised in the same household and in
the same family are as different as two random strangers. (Your character with
a disorder can have a sibling who doesn’t have a disorder.)
·
Personality disorders appear during
adolescence or early adulthood. ( The first chapter or so of your book can be dedicated to your character’s youth when the signs of a personality disorder became evident.)
·
All diseases/disorders look the same despite race, religion, and culture.
·
Multiple Personality Disorder is now called
Dissociate Identity Disorder.
·
Tumors in certain parts of the brain can
cause violent behavior that appears to be a condition of a disorder. (Could
your character have a brain tumor?)
TIP: There are a lot more disorders than just personality disorders, such as: anxiety disorders, cognitive disorders (Alzheimer’s disease), eating disorders, mood disorders (depression or mania), psychotic disorders, sleep disorders, substance-related disorders (alcohol dependence or amphetamine withdrawal), and psychological disorders.
Definition: a psychological disorder (or mental disorder) is a pattern of behavioral or psychological symptoms that impacts a person's ability to live ordinary life and/or creates distress for the person experiencing
these symptoms, affecting how a person feels, acts, thinks, and perceives.
Examples: Attention
Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), Bipolar disorder, Dissociative Identity
Disorder, Kleptomania, and schizophrenia.
Once again there are more, which leads
me to my first tip:
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Check out my sloppy handwriting. :P |
1. Research
Of course you will have to
do a lot of research! You need to know what the signs are for the disorder that
your character has, how it is treated, what it looks like, and how it affects
the people diagnosed with it.
2. Show the effects of the disorder.
Disorders are normally so
severe that they interfere with a person’s life, sometimes in multiple ways.
Make sure you show how your character’s disorder impacts their relationships,
emotions, behavior, thoughts, and habits. How does the disorder hurt his/her performance at work? What does he/she have to do in order to live from day to day?
3. What
is your character’s feeling about the disorder he/she has?
Readers always want to know
what a character is thinking and feeling. Is your character ashamed of his/her disorder? Is he/she angry that he/she has it? Or has he/she come to terms with it?
4. How
do the events that occur throughout the story affect the character?
Anything that happens in the
story can heighten the symptoms of your character's disorder. Someone referring
to him/her as “the schizo” or “an anorexic” can be damaging, so show how
it hurts him/her. Also, a big event such as a death can lead him/her into a mental
breakdown or to attempt suicide. Whatever happens in your story, show your
character’s reaction.
5. How
do other characters look at him/her?
Having a disorder
often becomes a label in society, and people tend to look at those
with disorders as the disorder itself, not as a human being. Let
your minor characters all react in
different ways. Some can be critical, mean/rude, cautious, or sympathetic while
others can treat him/her normally.
6. Let your character speak to doctors and psychologists.
In therapy sessions, you can
reveal possible causes for the disorder, and traumatic moments in their past.
When your character is talking to doctors, let him/her be hopeful or angry
depending on their view of the treatment or medication they are discussing.
7. Fit
the tone of the story to the disorder.
This especially works if
you’re writing in first person, and can help you to show what it is really like
to have a disorder. If your character is having a
hallucination, use strange images and odd similes/metaphors to describe
the hallucination as your character experiences it.
8. Use
your imagination
To write about
hallucinations (both visual and auditory)
it is best to use your imagination, unless you have experienced hallucinations
before (I have because of medication for my heart and boy, were they weird!)
then you can use those in your story.
9. Use
facts
Tell your readers things
they don’t know such as statistics. For example: 3 million people in the U.S.
have OCD, panic disorders run in families, and major depression affects 1 in 20
Americans every year.
10. View your story as a way to bring awareness.
There is a lot about disorders that people don’t know. Writing a story about a
character with a disorder can bring awareness to a lot of people who don’t
understand it, and can also help those who have it. You can even shatter
myths that come with the disorder you're writing about.
TIP: If you're writing a thriller, add a twist to the end. Maybe your character doesn't really have a disorder, but someone has been giving him/her drugs that causes side-effects much like the symptoms of a disorder.
QUESTIONS: Have you written a story about a character
with a disorder? How did you do it? What did you learn
along the way?
SHARE: If there is anything you think I should add to this
post, please tell me in the comments. There is only so much I can think of
(I don’t pretend to be an expert) and I may have forgotten something. Thank
you!