Writing Club
Join
Fanpop
New Post
Explore Fanpop
posted by marissa
"After a while, the insanity of the situation wore off and it seemed completely normal."
"After a while, the insanity of the situation wore off and it seemed completely normal."
Chapter Three:

Alan:

When Alan got onto the bus, he spotted Benny immediately and sat down next to him.
    
Alan took the bus every Tuesday and Thursday to visit his mother. He’d met Benny two weeks ago and the two talked every time Alan was on the bus, and Alan ate up every word that Benny said.
    
He had been skeptical at first, but it didn’t take long for Alan to honestly believe he was talking to God when he rode the bus. After a while, the insanity of the situation wore off and it seemed completely normal.
    
“Hello Alan,” Benny smiled. “How are you today? How’s your mother?”
    
“I’m just fine,” he began excitedly, “but Mum’s great. Doctors say she can come home as early as next week!”
    
“That’s wonderful!”
    
“It’s just like you said, Ben. You said everything would be fine and it is!”
    
Benny nodded. “You never have to worry about illness, Alan.”
    
Alan cocked his head to the side. “Yeah, you keep sayin’ that Ben, but I’ve been thinking… Why not?”
    
Benny shifted in his seat, trying to get comfortable after a few hours on the bus. “See, Al, it’s already been decided when you start and when you end. The beauty of it that you have to decide what to do with the middle bit – and that’s the best bit.”
    
Alan nodded, solemnly. “That’s deep. Ben. Real deep.”
    
Benny nodded as well. He knew the topic of death brought people down; it had already changed Alan from someone almost bursting with excitement to someone with his hands folded somberly in his lap. But Benny wished he could make people see that death really wasn’t so bad. It was inevitable, an unchangeable fact, so why let it bother you? That was like letting sunsets bother you. It’s going to happen, so why not find a way to make the day that you have great, instead of dwelling on when it will end?
    
“Benny?”
    
“Yes, Alan?”
    
“Who decides when we come and when we go?”
    
“I do,” Benny said, simply.
    
Alan pulled the yellow chord that lit the ‘Next Stop’ sign with the ding. “Of course,” he said with a little laugh, “How could I forget?”
    
Alan stood up. “You know,” he said after pausing thoughtfully, “my wife still can’t believe I talk to God on the bus. She thinks we’re both nuts.”
    
“That’s because your wife takes the subway.”
How To Write A Character’s Emotional Truth by Dui Jarrod via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
filmmaking
filmmaker
books
tv
television
web series
movies
How To Write A Great Antagonist by CSUN Professor Eric Edson [Screenwriting Masterclass] via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
film
author
screenwriting
college
books
movies
filmmaking
tv
Why Most People Fail At Screenwriting via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
film
author
movies
television
books
filmmaking
tv
screenwriting
What It's Like To Pitch A Movie Idea To Ridley Scott by Corey Mandell via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
movies
science fiction
books
filmmaking
film
tv
television
Power Of A Work Of Art by Dr. Ken Atchity via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
film
artist
fan pop
authors
tv
television
movies
A Chronic Problem For Screenwriters Is Failing To Tell A Story by Jill Chamberlain via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
film
screenwriting
television
filmmaking
books
movies
added by ktichenor
Source: pinterest
How To Guarantee Success In Show Business by Dr. Ken Atchity via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
author
books
hollywood
movies
television
filmmaking
Starting A Production Company by Todd Berger via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
comedy
film
filmmaking
tv
television
movies
Creating A Commercial Story Versus A Meaningful One by Jack Perez via Filmcourage.com.
video
writing
movies
film
filmmaking
author
books
tv
television
A Deeper Look At The Hero's Journey, Moral Ambiguity, and Tribalism by Adam Skelter via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
screenwriting
film
author
books
movies
filmmaking
independent filmmaking
Are Writers Better During Bad Times? by Todd Berger via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
screenwriting
film
movies
comedy
filmmaking
tv
television
Characters That Serve The Plot Are Less Interesting Than Ones Who Motivate The Plot by Jack Perez via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
film
author
movies
television
filmmaking
books
independent filmmaking
What Screenplay Will Sell? - Scott Kirkpatrick vs. Larry Wilson via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
film
filmmaking
movies
television
books
author
beetlejuice
tv
When A Script Option Stalls, What Does A Screenwriter Do Next? by Barrington & Janice via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
screenplay
script
writer
filmmaking
author
movies
tv
100,000 Screenplays Written Every Year, How Does A Screenwriter Stand Out? by Scott Kirkpatrick via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
screenplay
author
film
filmmaking
movies
screenwriting
Hollywood Isn’t Waiting Around For Novice Screenplays by Scott Kirkpatrick via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
screenwriting
script
author
film
tv
filmmaking
movies
How I Sold My First Two Screenplays by Gary Goldstein via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
screenwriting
author
filmmaking
film
movies
books
Fear Of Writing A Boring Story by Larry Wilson via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
screenwriting
script
beetlejuice
filmmaking
movies
tv
television
12 Useful Tools To Help Beginning Screenwriters Write A Better Screenplay by Eric Edson via FilmCourage.com.
video
writing
screenwriting
screenplay
movies
film
filmmaking
author