I live in a rural community where it’s common practice to acknowledge a passing motorist. If the acquaintance is a casual one or even a complete stranger, lifting a single index finger will suffice. If the relationship is closer, a purposeful wave is best.
When creating a character, I apply the passing motorist test.
Meeting someone for the first time, on a single-finger basis, generates superficial questions. What’s the motorist’s name? Where is the driver coming from? Where is the driver going?
Meeting again on a lonely road inspires deeper questions and answers—inquiries which generate plot lines and bring a personality to life. A character who’s better-known has a history—a background which, whether shared with the reader or residing in the writer’s mind, ignites memories of previous encounters and speculations regarding future action.
Fashioning a complex character, a writer’s thoughts dive deeper: Joe’s pickup is caked with mud. He’s been to the lake no doubt. Does he remember that summer we swam there as boys? His sister almost drowned that July. I wonder how she’s doing since her husband died.
Allowing a character to travel on unrecognized without a familiar wave and a desire to pursue probing thoughts is a missed opportunity, reducing that fleeting personality to a casual passerby. A reader won’t relate to such a one-dimensional character. A writer should care enough about a character to slow down, pull to a stop, roll the window down, and bide awhile in the middle of the road, vehicles nose-to-tail, chatting over old times, debating the present, and making future plans.
In Australia the driver is on the right side of the car so would roll down the right window to raise a finger or wave. Americans just have to adjust! S&G
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Ha ha. Just saw this. I’d better pay more attention.
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