The trick is the paradox - turning your story inside out. Now if it is something that appears to be of total normality and then suddenly turns inside out and is a different thing all together then that's fun to write.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
I don't write about the same thing every time, everyday, different things are happening out there and if you take the time to look around, you can see that, then you can put it all together and tell the story.
My style of writing is to allow the story to unfold on its own. I try not to structure my work too rigidly.
Above all, a well-imagined story is organized around extraordinary human behaviors and unexpected and startling events, which help illuminate the commonplace and the ordinary.
You set up a story and it turns inside out and that is, for me, the most exciting sort of story to write. The viewer thinks it's going to be about something and it does the opposite.
When you write a story, it just flows and you don't control it. It's subconscious.
A story in your head isn't a story. It's just a daydream until you actually write it down. So write it down.
What I do is write, and I try to write as closely as I can into what I call 'the mystery.'
When I am writing anything in general, I just want to tell the story that exists in my head; I don't try to write a parable or make a point.
In writing a weird story, I always try very carefully to achieve the right mood and atmosphere and place the emphasis where it belongs.
You can't write just anything. Your story needs structure.