How to creep the reader out with what seems like a normal person?I have three dead-end chapters. Should I...

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How to creep the reader out with what seems like a normal person?


I have three dead-end chapters. Should I keep them or remove them?How to write about Autism and Intellectual Disability?Specific character's thought in 3rd person omniscient writingCan anyone become a good writer?How to introduce a nameless, mysterious character in limited third person?How can I establish the nature of a person/group without action?Introduce a character and forget about them until the last chapter?How do I add tension to a story, when the reader knows the MC survives?How to make clear what a part-humanoid character looks like when they're quite common in their world?Characterizing a sentient robot: inhuman PoV













7















The person in question, though this is yet unknown, is not actually a person. Instead, they are some form of eldritch being of which we cannot comprehend. Though, they seem for all appearances and seemingly all mannerisms to appear as human, they are not.



The human eyes, but not mind, are fooled. Something is very off about this being, and everyone knows it.



How can I give the reader the impression of wrongness without it being said or reflected in other characters' thoughts?










share|improve this question























  • Hi. You might consider adding the horror tag. I didn't add it myself because I don't know if it's appropriate for your story. It sounds like it is, but I wasn't sure.

    – Cyn
    1 hour ago
















7















The person in question, though this is yet unknown, is not actually a person. Instead, they are some form of eldritch being of which we cannot comprehend. Though, they seem for all appearances and seemingly all mannerisms to appear as human, they are not.



The human eyes, but not mind, are fooled. Something is very off about this being, and everyone knows it.



How can I give the reader the impression of wrongness without it being said or reflected in other characters' thoughts?










share|improve this question























  • Hi. You might consider adding the horror tag. I didn't add it myself because I don't know if it's appropriate for your story. It sounds like it is, but I wasn't sure.

    – Cyn
    1 hour ago














7












7








7








The person in question, though this is yet unknown, is not actually a person. Instead, they are some form of eldritch being of which we cannot comprehend. Though, they seem for all appearances and seemingly all mannerisms to appear as human, they are not.



The human eyes, but not mind, are fooled. Something is very off about this being, and everyone knows it.



How can I give the reader the impression of wrongness without it being said or reflected in other characters' thoughts?










share|improve this question














The person in question, though this is yet unknown, is not actually a person. Instead, they are some form of eldritch being of which we cannot comprehend. Though, they seem for all appearances and seemingly all mannerisms to appear as human, they are not.



The human eyes, but not mind, are fooled. Something is very off about this being, and everyone knows it.



How can I give the reader the impression of wrongness without it being said or reflected in other characters' thoughts?







creative-writing characters technique






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked 5 hours ago









PiomicronPiomicron

428310




428310













  • Hi. You might consider adding the horror tag. I didn't add it myself because I don't know if it's appropriate for your story. It sounds like it is, but I wasn't sure.

    – Cyn
    1 hour ago



















  • Hi. You might consider adding the horror tag. I didn't add it myself because I don't know if it's appropriate for your story. It sounds like it is, but I wasn't sure.

    – Cyn
    1 hour ago

















Hi. You might consider adding the horror tag. I didn't add it myself because I don't know if it's appropriate for your story. It sounds like it is, but I wasn't sure.

– Cyn
1 hour ago





Hi. You might consider adding the horror tag. I didn't add it myself because I don't know if it's appropriate for your story. It sounds like it is, but I wasn't sure.

– Cyn
1 hour ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















2















Something is very off about this being, and everyone knows it.




Except it's not. When someone is very off, people steer clear. The creepy guy who hangs out in front of the supermarket makes his creepiness known by asking out any woman unfortunate enough to engage him in conversation for 5 seconds. The creepy little girl likes to talk in depth about dead animals she "happened" to find.



People talk and joke about creepy people they know. They do this to confirm their beliefs and to warn others. It's a form of social bonding, in a way that protects them from the weirdo...it can also be a form of discrimination.



Because there is sometimes that fine line between marking someone as creepy and discrimination, or just plain unfairness, people are reluctant to do it in borderline cases. They're more likely to label (either out loud or to themselves) when it's a stranger they won't see again, but even then, they may just shake it off.



What you want is a set of very subtle differences your character exudes. Any one of them can be passed off as misspeaking, being distracted, or just a personality quirk. It's the totality that give people pause.



Because of that, there is nothing specific anyone can point to. They won't mull over any one incident, because it doesn't amount to much. If you want all this out of not just your character's words, but also out of their thoughts, it has to be a pattern only the subconscious picks up on.



Have you ever been around someone and you suddenly start thinking about movies you saw, TV shows, books, etc? You might not even realize the person reminds you of someone else, just that hmmm, oh, this just popped into my head.



What if most every time one of your characters interacted with your eldritch, they turn to their companion and say something like, "Let's see a movie tonight! Oh, I know, how about Us?" Or they start talking about the real life haunted house in their town growing up. Or maybe they and their companion each get a quick chill.



Any one time, it doesn't mean anything. But the reader will see this over and over and get a clue, even if the characters only understand this on a subconscious level.



So what are the little things the eldritch can do that feel "off"?



I'd start with things that aren't actions or words.



People give off energy and an eldritch would have a very different energy. This would be another reason why a character wouldn't label the person as creepy or weird. Most people aren't willing to tell someone else that person's aura is off, or whatever. Unless they're already super into New Agey stuff (this is old agey stuff, but not in mainstream culture).




  • Get a chill when passing the eldritch.

  • When in a conversation or other interaction, your emotions feel like they're wrapped in cotton wool. You're not depressed, just muted.

  • The outside world is slightly muted as well. You don't pay attention to anyone else until someone resorts to tapping your shoulder or calling your name.

  • There's a pit in your stomach. Hunger? Ate something bad? Drank cold water too fast?

  • You realize your child is clinging to your arm so hard you almost drop your bag.

  • Your legs feel heavy, rooted, you want to end the interaction but your body isn't listening.


Then there are things that the eldritch actually does or says.



Little things they get wrong, as if they aren't from around here. There's no accent, no verbal tics, but something is not quite right. Can't put a finger on it.




  • Speaks to the same to children and adults. I don't mean avoiding baby talk, but more that they don't understand that people of different ages comprehend things on different levels.

  • Language is slightly too formal for the occasion.

  • Aside from a couple pat phrases, a complete inability to engage in small talk. With just enough self-awareness to make people think it's a quirk, not an inability.

  • No fidgeting. Nothing. No touching things to feel their texture (clothes, hair, plants). No playing with their own fingers.

  • No swaying or adjusting weight (some people move because it feels right and others need to adjust weight to avoid soreness). They're not at military readiness or anything, just still.

  • A second longer than average to respond to questions/conversation.

  • Complete (but brief) answers to questions, no more, no less.

  • Nothing personal, ever. No "my husband and I love that restaurant" or "time to go pick up the kids."

  • Clothes, makeup, hair, shoes, etc are exactly so, but not looking like a professional do-over or anything. They don't look like a model or actor, but there's nothing out of place either. No wrinkles or scuffs or faded lipstick. Hair looks real and not sprayed in place, but it's not frizzy or poofy or in an off position.






share|improve this answer
























  • I feel obligated to point out that a number of these hold the potential to be playing into harmful stereotypes of mental illnesses. As an autistic person myself, a number of those bullet points are behaviors I exhibit everyday.

    – Hearth
    17 mins ago











  • I know you probably did not intend that, but I have to downvote as this answer has the potential to be actually, if indirectly, harmful to me and others like me.

    – Hearth
    11 mins ago











  • @Hearth I was aware of the similarity to autistic characteristics when I was writing it. Which is a large part of why most people will push away the "oddness" their mind is reporting, as not to be "unaccepting." I was also careful to include characteristics that are the complete opposite of autism, like the stillness. I have my own disability with its own oddnesses (like I try not to shake hands). Pretty much every non-mainstream characteristic will be textbook for some disability or another.

    – Cyn
    9 mins ago











  • @Hearth You do what you feel you have to do. You are free to up or downvote any Q/A on this site for any reason (with few limitations). But I can come up with disabilities to match every one of my examples (no fidgeting...Parkinson's, etc). This isn't about disability. It's about not quite being what is expected.

    – Cyn
    6 mins ago











  • I understand that it's not about disability. The problem is that it plays into stereotypes and encourages people to see things I do all the time as creepy. I would rather not have people think I'm creepy just because I don't think in the same way they do. And that's a deeper systemic problem with society, but just... I don't know. I don't have any suggestions for what would be better. I just want to encourage people to be aware of potentially harmful stereotypes. I'm tired of being able to identify with the villain more than with the protagonist.

    – Hearth
    3 mins ago



















1














Instinct warns your other characters that there is something other about this one. He has never been observed to lose his temper in situations where that would be expected nor has he exhibited fear when that was appropriate.



You say everyone knows it, so the occasional Jesse is weird comment or thought would not be unusual. You wish to avoid this, so the tone with which you write this character can be the clue.



He can show no strong emotion since as an eldritch being anger or fear would render him lethal to the world. He charts a middle course and seems to feel little, certainly no strong emotions. He says little and what he does say is slightly inappropriate to the situation. Eldritch beings don’t need to do research and study human behaviour, so his will be ever so slightly askew.



Perhaps one thing that he has done is make it so others are unable to discuss him. He cannot be a subject of conversation as that is one way he has chosen to protect himself from discovery.



I would try the occasional scene where Jesse is present and even pivotal, but in later conversations about it he is not mentioned as having been present and his role was performed by someone or some guy who they just can’t remember - or by the speaker, but the other party knows this is not how it happened but can’t correct him as he cannot think about Jesse either.



Perhaps some have known him for years and Jesse does not change, forgetting to age his appearance. Perpetual thirty-five year old, but no one ever notices it unless in his presence and upon leaving, forgets.






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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
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    2















    Something is very off about this being, and everyone knows it.




    Except it's not. When someone is very off, people steer clear. The creepy guy who hangs out in front of the supermarket makes his creepiness known by asking out any woman unfortunate enough to engage him in conversation for 5 seconds. The creepy little girl likes to talk in depth about dead animals she "happened" to find.



    People talk and joke about creepy people they know. They do this to confirm their beliefs and to warn others. It's a form of social bonding, in a way that protects them from the weirdo...it can also be a form of discrimination.



    Because there is sometimes that fine line between marking someone as creepy and discrimination, or just plain unfairness, people are reluctant to do it in borderline cases. They're more likely to label (either out loud or to themselves) when it's a stranger they won't see again, but even then, they may just shake it off.



    What you want is a set of very subtle differences your character exudes. Any one of them can be passed off as misspeaking, being distracted, or just a personality quirk. It's the totality that give people pause.



    Because of that, there is nothing specific anyone can point to. They won't mull over any one incident, because it doesn't amount to much. If you want all this out of not just your character's words, but also out of their thoughts, it has to be a pattern only the subconscious picks up on.



    Have you ever been around someone and you suddenly start thinking about movies you saw, TV shows, books, etc? You might not even realize the person reminds you of someone else, just that hmmm, oh, this just popped into my head.



    What if most every time one of your characters interacted with your eldritch, they turn to their companion and say something like, "Let's see a movie tonight! Oh, I know, how about Us?" Or they start talking about the real life haunted house in their town growing up. Or maybe they and their companion each get a quick chill.



    Any one time, it doesn't mean anything. But the reader will see this over and over and get a clue, even if the characters only understand this on a subconscious level.



    So what are the little things the eldritch can do that feel "off"?



    I'd start with things that aren't actions or words.



    People give off energy and an eldritch would have a very different energy. This would be another reason why a character wouldn't label the person as creepy or weird. Most people aren't willing to tell someone else that person's aura is off, or whatever. Unless they're already super into New Agey stuff (this is old agey stuff, but not in mainstream culture).




    • Get a chill when passing the eldritch.

    • When in a conversation or other interaction, your emotions feel like they're wrapped in cotton wool. You're not depressed, just muted.

    • The outside world is slightly muted as well. You don't pay attention to anyone else until someone resorts to tapping your shoulder or calling your name.

    • There's a pit in your stomach. Hunger? Ate something bad? Drank cold water too fast?

    • You realize your child is clinging to your arm so hard you almost drop your bag.

    • Your legs feel heavy, rooted, you want to end the interaction but your body isn't listening.


    Then there are things that the eldritch actually does or says.



    Little things they get wrong, as if they aren't from around here. There's no accent, no verbal tics, but something is not quite right. Can't put a finger on it.




    • Speaks to the same to children and adults. I don't mean avoiding baby talk, but more that they don't understand that people of different ages comprehend things on different levels.

    • Language is slightly too formal for the occasion.

    • Aside from a couple pat phrases, a complete inability to engage in small talk. With just enough self-awareness to make people think it's a quirk, not an inability.

    • No fidgeting. Nothing. No touching things to feel their texture (clothes, hair, plants). No playing with their own fingers.

    • No swaying or adjusting weight (some people move because it feels right and others need to adjust weight to avoid soreness). They're not at military readiness or anything, just still.

    • A second longer than average to respond to questions/conversation.

    • Complete (but brief) answers to questions, no more, no less.

    • Nothing personal, ever. No "my husband and I love that restaurant" or "time to go pick up the kids."

    • Clothes, makeup, hair, shoes, etc are exactly so, but not looking like a professional do-over or anything. They don't look like a model or actor, but there's nothing out of place either. No wrinkles or scuffs or faded lipstick. Hair looks real and not sprayed in place, but it's not frizzy or poofy or in an off position.






    share|improve this answer
























    • I feel obligated to point out that a number of these hold the potential to be playing into harmful stereotypes of mental illnesses. As an autistic person myself, a number of those bullet points are behaviors I exhibit everyday.

      – Hearth
      17 mins ago











    • I know you probably did not intend that, but I have to downvote as this answer has the potential to be actually, if indirectly, harmful to me and others like me.

      – Hearth
      11 mins ago











    • @Hearth I was aware of the similarity to autistic characteristics when I was writing it. Which is a large part of why most people will push away the "oddness" their mind is reporting, as not to be "unaccepting." I was also careful to include characteristics that are the complete opposite of autism, like the stillness. I have my own disability with its own oddnesses (like I try not to shake hands). Pretty much every non-mainstream characteristic will be textbook for some disability or another.

      – Cyn
      9 mins ago











    • @Hearth You do what you feel you have to do. You are free to up or downvote any Q/A on this site for any reason (with few limitations). But I can come up with disabilities to match every one of my examples (no fidgeting...Parkinson's, etc). This isn't about disability. It's about not quite being what is expected.

      – Cyn
      6 mins ago











    • I understand that it's not about disability. The problem is that it plays into stereotypes and encourages people to see things I do all the time as creepy. I would rather not have people think I'm creepy just because I don't think in the same way they do. And that's a deeper systemic problem with society, but just... I don't know. I don't have any suggestions for what would be better. I just want to encourage people to be aware of potentially harmful stereotypes. I'm tired of being able to identify with the villain more than with the protagonist.

      – Hearth
      3 mins ago
















    2















    Something is very off about this being, and everyone knows it.




    Except it's not. When someone is very off, people steer clear. The creepy guy who hangs out in front of the supermarket makes his creepiness known by asking out any woman unfortunate enough to engage him in conversation for 5 seconds. The creepy little girl likes to talk in depth about dead animals she "happened" to find.



    People talk and joke about creepy people they know. They do this to confirm their beliefs and to warn others. It's a form of social bonding, in a way that protects them from the weirdo...it can also be a form of discrimination.



    Because there is sometimes that fine line between marking someone as creepy and discrimination, or just plain unfairness, people are reluctant to do it in borderline cases. They're more likely to label (either out loud or to themselves) when it's a stranger they won't see again, but even then, they may just shake it off.



    What you want is a set of very subtle differences your character exudes. Any one of them can be passed off as misspeaking, being distracted, or just a personality quirk. It's the totality that give people pause.



    Because of that, there is nothing specific anyone can point to. They won't mull over any one incident, because it doesn't amount to much. If you want all this out of not just your character's words, but also out of their thoughts, it has to be a pattern only the subconscious picks up on.



    Have you ever been around someone and you suddenly start thinking about movies you saw, TV shows, books, etc? You might not even realize the person reminds you of someone else, just that hmmm, oh, this just popped into my head.



    What if most every time one of your characters interacted with your eldritch, they turn to their companion and say something like, "Let's see a movie tonight! Oh, I know, how about Us?" Or they start talking about the real life haunted house in their town growing up. Or maybe they and their companion each get a quick chill.



    Any one time, it doesn't mean anything. But the reader will see this over and over and get a clue, even if the characters only understand this on a subconscious level.



    So what are the little things the eldritch can do that feel "off"?



    I'd start with things that aren't actions or words.



    People give off energy and an eldritch would have a very different energy. This would be another reason why a character wouldn't label the person as creepy or weird. Most people aren't willing to tell someone else that person's aura is off, or whatever. Unless they're already super into New Agey stuff (this is old agey stuff, but not in mainstream culture).




    • Get a chill when passing the eldritch.

    • When in a conversation or other interaction, your emotions feel like they're wrapped in cotton wool. You're not depressed, just muted.

    • The outside world is slightly muted as well. You don't pay attention to anyone else until someone resorts to tapping your shoulder or calling your name.

    • There's a pit in your stomach. Hunger? Ate something bad? Drank cold water too fast?

    • You realize your child is clinging to your arm so hard you almost drop your bag.

    • Your legs feel heavy, rooted, you want to end the interaction but your body isn't listening.


    Then there are things that the eldritch actually does or says.



    Little things they get wrong, as if they aren't from around here. There's no accent, no verbal tics, but something is not quite right. Can't put a finger on it.




    • Speaks to the same to children and adults. I don't mean avoiding baby talk, but more that they don't understand that people of different ages comprehend things on different levels.

    • Language is slightly too formal for the occasion.

    • Aside from a couple pat phrases, a complete inability to engage in small talk. With just enough self-awareness to make people think it's a quirk, not an inability.

    • No fidgeting. Nothing. No touching things to feel their texture (clothes, hair, plants). No playing with their own fingers.

    • No swaying or adjusting weight (some people move because it feels right and others need to adjust weight to avoid soreness). They're not at military readiness or anything, just still.

    • A second longer than average to respond to questions/conversation.

    • Complete (but brief) answers to questions, no more, no less.

    • Nothing personal, ever. No "my husband and I love that restaurant" or "time to go pick up the kids."

    • Clothes, makeup, hair, shoes, etc are exactly so, but not looking like a professional do-over or anything. They don't look like a model or actor, but there's nothing out of place either. No wrinkles or scuffs or faded lipstick. Hair looks real and not sprayed in place, but it's not frizzy or poofy or in an off position.






    share|improve this answer
























    • I feel obligated to point out that a number of these hold the potential to be playing into harmful stereotypes of mental illnesses. As an autistic person myself, a number of those bullet points are behaviors I exhibit everyday.

      – Hearth
      17 mins ago











    • I know you probably did not intend that, but I have to downvote as this answer has the potential to be actually, if indirectly, harmful to me and others like me.

      – Hearth
      11 mins ago











    • @Hearth I was aware of the similarity to autistic characteristics when I was writing it. Which is a large part of why most people will push away the "oddness" their mind is reporting, as not to be "unaccepting." I was also careful to include characteristics that are the complete opposite of autism, like the stillness. I have my own disability with its own oddnesses (like I try not to shake hands). Pretty much every non-mainstream characteristic will be textbook for some disability or another.

      – Cyn
      9 mins ago











    • @Hearth You do what you feel you have to do. You are free to up or downvote any Q/A on this site for any reason (with few limitations). But I can come up with disabilities to match every one of my examples (no fidgeting...Parkinson's, etc). This isn't about disability. It's about not quite being what is expected.

      – Cyn
      6 mins ago











    • I understand that it's not about disability. The problem is that it plays into stereotypes and encourages people to see things I do all the time as creepy. I would rather not have people think I'm creepy just because I don't think in the same way they do. And that's a deeper systemic problem with society, but just... I don't know. I don't have any suggestions for what would be better. I just want to encourage people to be aware of potentially harmful stereotypes. I'm tired of being able to identify with the villain more than with the protagonist.

      – Hearth
      3 mins ago














    2












    2








    2








    Something is very off about this being, and everyone knows it.




    Except it's not. When someone is very off, people steer clear. The creepy guy who hangs out in front of the supermarket makes his creepiness known by asking out any woman unfortunate enough to engage him in conversation for 5 seconds. The creepy little girl likes to talk in depth about dead animals she "happened" to find.



    People talk and joke about creepy people they know. They do this to confirm their beliefs and to warn others. It's a form of social bonding, in a way that protects them from the weirdo...it can also be a form of discrimination.



    Because there is sometimes that fine line between marking someone as creepy and discrimination, or just plain unfairness, people are reluctant to do it in borderline cases. They're more likely to label (either out loud or to themselves) when it's a stranger they won't see again, but even then, they may just shake it off.



    What you want is a set of very subtle differences your character exudes. Any one of them can be passed off as misspeaking, being distracted, or just a personality quirk. It's the totality that give people pause.



    Because of that, there is nothing specific anyone can point to. They won't mull over any one incident, because it doesn't amount to much. If you want all this out of not just your character's words, but also out of their thoughts, it has to be a pattern only the subconscious picks up on.



    Have you ever been around someone and you suddenly start thinking about movies you saw, TV shows, books, etc? You might not even realize the person reminds you of someone else, just that hmmm, oh, this just popped into my head.



    What if most every time one of your characters interacted with your eldritch, they turn to their companion and say something like, "Let's see a movie tonight! Oh, I know, how about Us?" Or they start talking about the real life haunted house in their town growing up. Or maybe they and their companion each get a quick chill.



    Any one time, it doesn't mean anything. But the reader will see this over and over and get a clue, even if the characters only understand this on a subconscious level.



    So what are the little things the eldritch can do that feel "off"?



    I'd start with things that aren't actions or words.



    People give off energy and an eldritch would have a very different energy. This would be another reason why a character wouldn't label the person as creepy or weird. Most people aren't willing to tell someone else that person's aura is off, or whatever. Unless they're already super into New Agey stuff (this is old agey stuff, but not in mainstream culture).




    • Get a chill when passing the eldritch.

    • When in a conversation or other interaction, your emotions feel like they're wrapped in cotton wool. You're not depressed, just muted.

    • The outside world is slightly muted as well. You don't pay attention to anyone else until someone resorts to tapping your shoulder or calling your name.

    • There's a pit in your stomach. Hunger? Ate something bad? Drank cold water too fast?

    • You realize your child is clinging to your arm so hard you almost drop your bag.

    • Your legs feel heavy, rooted, you want to end the interaction but your body isn't listening.


    Then there are things that the eldritch actually does or says.



    Little things they get wrong, as if they aren't from around here. There's no accent, no verbal tics, but something is not quite right. Can't put a finger on it.




    • Speaks to the same to children and adults. I don't mean avoiding baby talk, but more that they don't understand that people of different ages comprehend things on different levels.

    • Language is slightly too formal for the occasion.

    • Aside from a couple pat phrases, a complete inability to engage in small talk. With just enough self-awareness to make people think it's a quirk, not an inability.

    • No fidgeting. Nothing. No touching things to feel their texture (clothes, hair, plants). No playing with their own fingers.

    • No swaying or adjusting weight (some people move because it feels right and others need to adjust weight to avoid soreness). They're not at military readiness or anything, just still.

    • A second longer than average to respond to questions/conversation.

    • Complete (but brief) answers to questions, no more, no less.

    • Nothing personal, ever. No "my husband and I love that restaurant" or "time to go pick up the kids."

    • Clothes, makeup, hair, shoes, etc are exactly so, but not looking like a professional do-over or anything. They don't look like a model or actor, but there's nothing out of place either. No wrinkles or scuffs or faded lipstick. Hair looks real and not sprayed in place, but it's not frizzy or poofy or in an off position.






    share|improve this answer














    Something is very off about this being, and everyone knows it.




    Except it's not. When someone is very off, people steer clear. The creepy guy who hangs out in front of the supermarket makes his creepiness known by asking out any woman unfortunate enough to engage him in conversation for 5 seconds. The creepy little girl likes to talk in depth about dead animals she "happened" to find.



    People talk and joke about creepy people they know. They do this to confirm their beliefs and to warn others. It's a form of social bonding, in a way that protects them from the weirdo...it can also be a form of discrimination.



    Because there is sometimes that fine line between marking someone as creepy and discrimination, or just plain unfairness, people are reluctant to do it in borderline cases. They're more likely to label (either out loud or to themselves) when it's a stranger they won't see again, but even then, they may just shake it off.



    What you want is a set of very subtle differences your character exudes. Any one of them can be passed off as misspeaking, being distracted, or just a personality quirk. It's the totality that give people pause.



    Because of that, there is nothing specific anyone can point to. They won't mull over any one incident, because it doesn't amount to much. If you want all this out of not just your character's words, but also out of their thoughts, it has to be a pattern only the subconscious picks up on.



    Have you ever been around someone and you suddenly start thinking about movies you saw, TV shows, books, etc? You might not even realize the person reminds you of someone else, just that hmmm, oh, this just popped into my head.



    What if most every time one of your characters interacted with your eldritch, they turn to their companion and say something like, "Let's see a movie tonight! Oh, I know, how about Us?" Or they start talking about the real life haunted house in their town growing up. Or maybe they and their companion each get a quick chill.



    Any one time, it doesn't mean anything. But the reader will see this over and over and get a clue, even if the characters only understand this on a subconscious level.



    So what are the little things the eldritch can do that feel "off"?



    I'd start with things that aren't actions or words.



    People give off energy and an eldritch would have a very different energy. This would be another reason why a character wouldn't label the person as creepy or weird. Most people aren't willing to tell someone else that person's aura is off, or whatever. Unless they're already super into New Agey stuff (this is old agey stuff, but not in mainstream culture).




    • Get a chill when passing the eldritch.

    • When in a conversation or other interaction, your emotions feel like they're wrapped in cotton wool. You're not depressed, just muted.

    • The outside world is slightly muted as well. You don't pay attention to anyone else until someone resorts to tapping your shoulder or calling your name.

    • There's a pit in your stomach. Hunger? Ate something bad? Drank cold water too fast?

    • You realize your child is clinging to your arm so hard you almost drop your bag.

    • Your legs feel heavy, rooted, you want to end the interaction but your body isn't listening.


    Then there are things that the eldritch actually does or says.



    Little things they get wrong, as if they aren't from around here. There's no accent, no verbal tics, but something is not quite right. Can't put a finger on it.




    • Speaks to the same to children and adults. I don't mean avoiding baby talk, but more that they don't understand that people of different ages comprehend things on different levels.

    • Language is slightly too formal for the occasion.

    • Aside from a couple pat phrases, a complete inability to engage in small talk. With just enough self-awareness to make people think it's a quirk, not an inability.

    • No fidgeting. Nothing. No touching things to feel their texture (clothes, hair, plants). No playing with their own fingers.

    • No swaying or adjusting weight (some people move because it feels right and others need to adjust weight to avoid soreness). They're not at military readiness or anything, just still.

    • A second longer than average to respond to questions/conversation.

    • Complete (but brief) answers to questions, no more, no less.

    • Nothing personal, ever. No "my husband and I love that restaurant" or "time to go pick up the kids."

    • Clothes, makeup, hair, shoes, etc are exactly so, but not looking like a professional do-over or anything. They don't look like a model or actor, but there's nothing out of place either. No wrinkles or scuffs or faded lipstick. Hair looks real and not sprayed in place, but it's not frizzy or poofy or in an off position.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 1 hour ago









    CynCyn

    19.2k14289




    19.2k14289













    • I feel obligated to point out that a number of these hold the potential to be playing into harmful stereotypes of mental illnesses. As an autistic person myself, a number of those bullet points are behaviors I exhibit everyday.

      – Hearth
      17 mins ago











    • I know you probably did not intend that, but I have to downvote as this answer has the potential to be actually, if indirectly, harmful to me and others like me.

      – Hearth
      11 mins ago











    • @Hearth I was aware of the similarity to autistic characteristics when I was writing it. Which is a large part of why most people will push away the "oddness" their mind is reporting, as not to be "unaccepting." I was also careful to include characteristics that are the complete opposite of autism, like the stillness. I have my own disability with its own oddnesses (like I try not to shake hands). Pretty much every non-mainstream characteristic will be textbook for some disability or another.

      – Cyn
      9 mins ago











    • @Hearth You do what you feel you have to do. You are free to up or downvote any Q/A on this site for any reason (with few limitations). But I can come up with disabilities to match every one of my examples (no fidgeting...Parkinson's, etc). This isn't about disability. It's about not quite being what is expected.

      – Cyn
      6 mins ago











    • I understand that it's not about disability. The problem is that it plays into stereotypes and encourages people to see things I do all the time as creepy. I would rather not have people think I'm creepy just because I don't think in the same way they do. And that's a deeper systemic problem with society, but just... I don't know. I don't have any suggestions for what would be better. I just want to encourage people to be aware of potentially harmful stereotypes. I'm tired of being able to identify with the villain more than with the protagonist.

      – Hearth
      3 mins ago



















    • I feel obligated to point out that a number of these hold the potential to be playing into harmful stereotypes of mental illnesses. As an autistic person myself, a number of those bullet points are behaviors I exhibit everyday.

      – Hearth
      17 mins ago











    • I know you probably did not intend that, but I have to downvote as this answer has the potential to be actually, if indirectly, harmful to me and others like me.

      – Hearth
      11 mins ago











    • @Hearth I was aware of the similarity to autistic characteristics when I was writing it. Which is a large part of why most people will push away the "oddness" their mind is reporting, as not to be "unaccepting." I was also careful to include characteristics that are the complete opposite of autism, like the stillness. I have my own disability with its own oddnesses (like I try not to shake hands). Pretty much every non-mainstream characteristic will be textbook for some disability or another.

      – Cyn
      9 mins ago











    • @Hearth You do what you feel you have to do. You are free to up or downvote any Q/A on this site for any reason (with few limitations). But I can come up with disabilities to match every one of my examples (no fidgeting...Parkinson's, etc). This isn't about disability. It's about not quite being what is expected.

      – Cyn
      6 mins ago











    • I understand that it's not about disability. The problem is that it plays into stereotypes and encourages people to see things I do all the time as creepy. I would rather not have people think I'm creepy just because I don't think in the same way they do. And that's a deeper systemic problem with society, but just... I don't know. I don't have any suggestions for what would be better. I just want to encourage people to be aware of potentially harmful stereotypes. I'm tired of being able to identify with the villain more than with the protagonist.

      – Hearth
      3 mins ago

















    I feel obligated to point out that a number of these hold the potential to be playing into harmful stereotypes of mental illnesses. As an autistic person myself, a number of those bullet points are behaviors I exhibit everyday.

    – Hearth
    17 mins ago





    I feel obligated to point out that a number of these hold the potential to be playing into harmful stereotypes of mental illnesses. As an autistic person myself, a number of those bullet points are behaviors I exhibit everyday.

    – Hearth
    17 mins ago













    I know you probably did not intend that, but I have to downvote as this answer has the potential to be actually, if indirectly, harmful to me and others like me.

    – Hearth
    11 mins ago





    I know you probably did not intend that, but I have to downvote as this answer has the potential to be actually, if indirectly, harmful to me and others like me.

    – Hearth
    11 mins ago













    @Hearth I was aware of the similarity to autistic characteristics when I was writing it. Which is a large part of why most people will push away the "oddness" their mind is reporting, as not to be "unaccepting." I was also careful to include characteristics that are the complete opposite of autism, like the stillness. I have my own disability with its own oddnesses (like I try not to shake hands). Pretty much every non-mainstream characteristic will be textbook for some disability or another.

    – Cyn
    9 mins ago





    @Hearth I was aware of the similarity to autistic characteristics when I was writing it. Which is a large part of why most people will push away the "oddness" their mind is reporting, as not to be "unaccepting." I was also careful to include characteristics that are the complete opposite of autism, like the stillness. I have my own disability with its own oddnesses (like I try not to shake hands). Pretty much every non-mainstream characteristic will be textbook for some disability or another.

    – Cyn
    9 mins ago













    @Hearth You do what you feel you have to do. You are free to up or downvote any Q/A on this site for any reason (with few limitations). But I can come up with disabilities to match every one of my examples (no fidgeting...Parkinson's, etc). This isn't about disability. It's about not quite being what is expected.

    – Cyn
    6 mins ago





    @Hearth You do what you feel you have to do. You are free to up or downvote any Q/A on this site for any reason (with few limitations). But I can come up with disabilities to match every one of my examples (no fidgeting...Parkinson's, etc). This isn't about disability. It's about not quite being what is expected.

    – Cyn
    6 mins ago













    I understand that it's not about disability. The problem is that it plays into stereotypes and encourages people to see things I do all the time as creepy. I would rather not have people think I'm creepy just because I don't think in the same way they do. And that's a deeper systemic problem with society, but just... I don't know. I don't have any suggestions for what would be better. I just want to encourage people to be aware of potentially harmful stereotypes. I'm tired of being able to identify with the villain more than with the protagonist.

    – Hearth
    3 mins ago





    I understand that it's not about disability. The problem is that it plays into stereotypes and encourages people to see things I do all the time as creepy. I would rather not have people think I'm creepy just because I don't think in the same way they do. And that's a deeper systemic problem with society, but just... I don't know. I don't have any suggestions for what would be better. I just want to encourage people to be aware of potentially harmful stereotypes. I'm tired of being able to identify with the villain more than with the protagonist.

    – Hearth
    3 mins ago











    1














    Instinct warns your other characters that there is something other about this one. He has never been observed to lose his temper in situations where that would be expected nor has he exhibited fear when that was appropriate.



    You say everyone knows it, so the occasional Jesse is weird comment or thought would not be unusual. You wish to avoid this, so the tone with which you write this character can be the clue.



    He can show no strong emotion since as an eldritch being anger or fear would render him lethal to the world. He charts a middle course and seems to feel little, certainly no strong emotions. He says little and what he does say is slightly inappropriate to the situation. Eldritch beings don’t need to do research and study human behaviour, so his will be ever so slightly askew.



    Perhaps one thing that he has done is make it so others are unable to discuss him. He cannot be a subject of conversation as that is one way he has chosen to protect himself from discovery.



    I would try the occasional scene where Jesse is present and even pivotal, but in later conversations about it he is not mentioned as having been present and his role was performed by someone or some guy who they just can’t remember - or by the speaker, but the other party knows this is not how it happened but can’t correct him as he cannot think about Jesse either.



    Perhaps some have known him for years and Jesse does not change, forgetting to age his appearance. Perpetual thirty-five year old, but no one ever notices it unless in his presence and upon leaving, forgets.






    share|improve this answer




























      1














      Instinct warns your other characters that there is something other about this one. He has never been observed to lose his temper in situations where that would be expected nor has he exhibited fear when that was appropriate.



      You say everyone knows it, so the occasional Jesse is weird comment or thought would not be unusual. You wish to avoid this, so the tone with which you write this character can be the clue.



      He can show no strong emotion since as an eldritch being anger or fear would render him lethal to the world. He charts a middle course and seems to feel little, certainly no strong emotions. He says little and what he does say is slightly inappropriate to the situation. Eldritch beings don’t need to do research and study human behaviour, so his will be ever so slightly askew.



      Perhaps one thing that he has done is make it so others are unable to discuss him. He cannot be a subject of conversation as that is one way he has chosen to protect himself from discovery.



      I would try the occasional scene where Jesse is present and even pivotal, but in later conversations about it he is not mentioned as having been present and his role was performed by someone or some guy who they just can’t remember - or by the speaker, but the other party knows this is not how it happened but can’t correct him as he cannot think about Jesse either.



      Perhaps some have known him for years and Jesse does not change, forgetting to age his appearance. Perpetual thirty-five year old, but no one ever notices it unless in his presence and upon leaving, forgets.






      share|improve this answer


























        1












        1








        1







        Instinct warns your other characters that there is something other about this one. He has never been observed to lose his temper in situations where that would be expected nor has he exhibited fear when that was appropriate.



        You say everyone knows it, so the occasional Jesse is weird comment or thought would not be unusual. You wish to avoid this, so the tone with which you write this character can be the clue.



        He can show no strong emotion since as an eldritch being anger or fear would render him lethal to the world. He charts a middle course and seems to feel little, certainly no strong emotions. He says little and what he does say is slightly inappropriate to the situation. Eldritch beings don’t need to do research and study human behaviour, so his will be ever so slightly askew.



        Perhaps one thing that he has done is make it so others are unable to discuss him. He cannot be a subject of conversation as that is one way he has chosen to protect himself from discovery.



        I would try the occasional scene where Jesse is present and even pivotal, but in later conversations about it he is not mentioned as having been present and his role was performed by someone or some guy who they just can’t remember - or by the speaker, but the other party knows this is not how it happened but can’t correct him as he cannot think about Jesse either.



        Perhaps some have known him for years and Jesse does not change, forgetting to age his appearance. Perpetual thirty-five year old, but no one ever notices it unless in his presence and upon leaving, forgets.






        share|improve this answer













        Instinct warns your other characters that there is something other about this one. He has never been observed to lose his temper in situations where that would be expected nor has he exhibited fear when that was appropriate.



        You say everyone knows it, so the occasional Jesse is weird comment or thought would not be unusual. You wish to avoid this, so the tone with which you write this character can be the clue.



        He can show no strong emotion since as an eldritch being anger or fear would render him lethal to the world. He charts a middle course and seems to feel little, certainly no strong emotions. He says little and what he does say is slightly inappropriate to the situation. Eldritch beings don’t need to do research and study human behaviour, so his will be ever so slightly askew.



        Perhaps one thing that he has done is make it so others are unable to discuss him. He cannot be a subject of conversation as that is one way he has chosen to protect himself from discovery.



        I would try the occasional scene where Jesse is present and even pivotal, but in later conversations about it he is not mentioned as having been present and his role was performed by someone or some guy who they just can’t remember - or by the speaker, but the other party knows this is not how it happened but can’t correct him as he cannot think about Jesse either.



        Perhaps some have known him for years and Jesse does not change, forgetting to age his appearance. Perpetual thirty-five year old, but no one ever notices it unless in his presence and upon leaving, forgets.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 3 hours ago









        RasdashanRasdashan

        10.4k11365




        10.4k11365






























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