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WRITERS HELPING WRITERS®

WRITERS HELPING WRITERS®

Helping writers become bestselling authors

Emotional Wounds Entry: Victimization via Identity Theft

Published: May 30, 2015 by ANGELA ACKERMAN

When you’re writing a character, it’s important to know why she is the way she is. Knowing her backstory is important to achieving this end, and one of the most impactful pieces of a character’s backstory is her emotional wound. This negative experience from the past is so intense that a character will go to great lengths to avoid experiencing that kind of pain and negative emotion again. As a result, certain behaviors, beliefs, and character traits will emerge.

Characters, like real people, are unique, and will respond to wounding events differently. The vast array of possible emotional wounds combined with each character’s personality gives you many options in terms of how your character will turn out. With the right amount of exploration, you should be able to come up with a character whose past appropriately affects her present, resulting in a realistic character that will ring true with readers. Understanding what wounds a protagonist bears will also help you plot out her arc, creating a compelling journey of change that will satisfy readers.

We hope the sample list of ideas below will help you see how emotional trauma will influence your character’s behavior and mindset. For the full entry of this and over 100 other emotional wounds, check into our bestselling resource, The Emotional Wound Thesaurus: A Writer’s Guide to Character Expression.

VICTIMIZATION VIA IDENTITY THEFT

ANONYMOUSExamples:

  • having to fight a charge on one’s record because a criminal identified himself as the character using false documents upon arrest
  • having one’s passport stolen or duplicated and used to bring a criminal or immigrant into the country illegally
  • having one’s bank account or investments drained by someone with false documents posing as the character…

Basic Needs Often Compromised By This Wound: physiological needs, safety and security, esteem and recognition

False Beliefs That May Be Embraced As a Result of This Wound:

  • I can’t trust anyone but myself
  • I was targeted because I am weak
  • Trying to make a better life is useless because someone will just take it away from me…

Positive Attributes That May Result: aware, cautious, conservative, discreet, scrupulous, structured, watchful

Negative Traits That May Result: biased, cagey, close-mouthed, controlling, cynical, deceptive, guarded, hostile, insecure, obsessive, paranoid, unsociable, secretive

Resulting Fears:

  • fear of being used or exploited
  • fear of losing everything one has built
  • fear of financial ruin…

Possible Habits That May Emerge:

  • avoiding technology and information-gathering processes
  • stashing money in hiding places rather than risking it to the bank
  • obsessively changing one’s passwords, bank accounts and switching credit cards
  • refusing to share personal information
  • shutting down social media accounts…

TIP: If you need help understanding the impact of these factors, please read our introductory post on the Emotional Wound Thesaurus.

Image: Pixabay: Niekervlaan

Which emotional wounds are haunting your characters and keeping them from being whole and fulfilled?

Emotional wounds are incredibly formative, changing how a character views the world, causing trust issues, damaging their self-worth, dictating how they will interact with other people, and making it harder for them to achieve their goals. As such, understanding your character’s wound is vitally important to your overall story.

To help with this, we have integrated this thesaurus into our online library at One Stop For Writers.

Logo-OneStop-For-Writers-25-small

Each entry has been enhanced and expanded to provide even more helpful information about your character’s wounds and is cross-referenced with our other thesauruses for easy searchability. We’ve also included a must-see tutorial on this topic—a crash-course on how a wound impacts the affected character and the role wounds play in his or her arc over the course of a story. Interested in seeing a sampling of our completed wound thesaurus entries?  Head on over and register for free!

On the other hand, if you prefer your references in book form, we’ve got you covered, too, because this thesaurus is now available for purchase in both digital and print form. In addition to the 120+ entries, each book contains instructional front matter to help you understand wounds and how they’ll affect your character and story. With chapters about the wound’s aftereffects and how the event ties in to the character arc, along with ideas on brainstorming your character’s wound and how to best reveal the trauma to readers, this book will be your go-to resource for connecting the backstory dots and coming up with characters who are well-rounded and realistic.

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ANGELA ACKERMAN
ANGELA ACKERMAN

Angela is a writing coach, international speaker, and bestselling author who loves to travel, teach, empower writers, and pay-it-forward. She also is a founder of One Stop For Writers, a portal to powerful, innovative tools to help writers elevate their storytelling.

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Manju Howard (@ManjuBeth) says

    June 1, 2015 at 5:21 pm

    An increasing problem. Over a decade ago, my husband’s license plate was stolen off his totaled car. The thief racked up numerous speeding tickets with that plate. My husband had to clear his name.

    • ANGELA ACKERMAN says

      June 2, 2015 at 3:13 pm

      Oh my gosh, what a pain that would be. Some people think they can do whatever they want to get away with something, never once caring about the collateral damage they cause.

  2. Traci Kenworth says

    May 30, 2015 at 10:33 am

    Awesome one, Angela!!

    • ANGELA ACKERMAN says

      May 30, 2015 at 11:21 am

      Thanks, Traci!

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