Subject: Oh hey it's my favorite thing to talk about
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Posted on: 2013-05-08 04:10:00 UTC

Some of you may know of my Agents Deuce and Adder; they're both characters of the same original story of mine. One of them was abandoned (one way or another) by his mother and twin brother and left alone with a sociopathic father who raised him to be an instrument of revenge, and continued down that path until the aforementioned brother returned and stopped him by killing him (though he would later be resurrected and given a second shot at making things right). The other took a magical proverbial bullet to the head when she was little and as a result must contend with infrequent but barely-controllable berserk rages. She then became an exile from her people at the tender age of nine, after she witnessed her mother's murder and barely escaped with her own life. She was born a member of the group of people designated as villains, a secret she hides from her friends every day.

I think that if I make a character suffer, it mainly happens when I'm really, really attached to them. This may seem ironic, and I used to think it was, but I really don't anymore. One of my favorite aspects of writing and reading fiction is watching characters experience positive growth. It's so beautiful and I love it. And, well, some of the best positive growth starts at rock bottom, and you can't have good development without bumps and stumbling blocks along the way. It's impossible, and just unrealistic.

So yes, I kick my characters while they're down. I tear their families apart, take away the things they love, and beat them into the dust. And then when I'm done, I stand back, and I watch as they curse and cry and then catch their breath and get back up. Some of them stagger up, bruised and bleeding and barely standing, and go on to drag someone else up with them. I love to see them be strong. I love to see them make one another strong. And that's why I torture them: because I know they can take it.

In short, I'll see your comic and raise you another one. http://mindofgemini.deviantart.com/art/TGf-Mog-Comic-Crossover-My-Writing-Process-332939062

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