The Hardest Scenes are Sometimes the Truest
One of my characters is based on one of my best friends. Just as my best friend has always come through for me, that’s how I’ve written this character.
Comatose is filled with fictional events, but it also draws from real moments in my life. I’d always planned for Adyson (the best friend) to have her moment to shine—a scene of pure, raw emotion about everything her friend has put her through over the years. Last night, I finally wrote it.
I thought one of the darker, more traumatic scenes would be the hardest to write. I was wrong. The hardest part was stepping into my best friend’s mind, seeing through her eyes, and putting into words the pain I’ve caused her. It’s the only scene in the entire book where I had to stop, leave myself an author’s note in my notebook, and take the rest of the night off.
As people, we don’t always see things the way others do. We may not realize how our actions affect someone until we try to stand in their shoes—feel their thoughts, their body, their grief. Writing that scene was eye-opening.
It made me cry, realizing I may have hurt my friend this deeply—the friend who has become more like a sister. But it also reminded me why this book needs to exist. Why the story matters. And in the end, it didn’t just break me. It fueled me.
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