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  • I got in my first car accident when I was sixteen.

  • I had just gotten my license and I was driving home when a car pulled into the intersection.

  • And bang! It hit me.

  • It had happened that quick.

  • Bang!

  • But when I play that memory back, it doesn't take two seconds.

  • I see the tires of the car rolling through the stop sign,

  • I have time to think, "You know, I think that car is going to hit me."

  • I see the right-hand corner of the hood crumple up like tin foil.

  • I see the red paint flake off and drift off into the air.

  • I can see all of that, like it's happening in slow motion.

  • In my memory, that experience takes ten seconds.

  • But why?

  • Why did that memory play back longer than the actual time it took?

  • This is an interesting phenomenon and it's not just for car accidents, a roller coaster, or a first kiss.

  • These events seem to take longer than they actually take.

  • But why?

  • And when it comes to writing about that experience, how do I get that peculiar feeling across?

  • How do I slow down time as a writer?

  • To get the answer, we have to visit Hollywood.

  • You see, the way filmmakers create slow motion will tell us a lot about how writers can create slow motion.

  • First, let's remember how film works.

  • When the camera turns on, it's not recording motion.

  • It's taking lots and lots of individual pictures.

  • Then when those pictures are played back in the projector,

  • they blend together and create the appearance of motion,

  • like a flip book.

  • So, let's imagine that a camera man needs to film his actress skipping through a field of daisies in regular motion.

  • Ready, action.

  • She skips across the field.

  • He records it.

  • And...cut.

  • Let's say for the sake of easy math that our camera man took 50 pictures.

  • 50 little frames on that length of film.

  • Now, let's take that film and play it back at the rate of 50 frames per 5 seconds.

  • This rate is constant, the projector will always go at the same speed.

  • It's easy, we got 50 frames, so our film takes 5 seconds.

  • She skips across the field...

  • ...and cut!

  • So, then, how do we slow down time in film?

  • How do we create slow motion?

  • Maybe this is a surprise, but we don't take less pictures, we take more pictures.

  • Ready, action!

  • She skips across the field.

  • He records it.

  • And cut.

  • Now we have a lot of film, a long length.

  • Let's say 100 frames long.

  • Now, when we play it back, it takes a longer time to get through.

  • And there's the actress in slow motion.

  • Skipping through the field of daisies!

  • Which brings us now to writing.

  • When you're writing a narrative, you may want to use slow motion in one of your scenes.

  • It's a cool effect, just like it is in Hollywood, and it draws the reader's attention to important moments.

  • Well, here's how you do it.

  • You see, when we read, our brain makes the words into pictures and the pictures blend into action.

  • So what we read is what we see in the time it takes us to read it.

  • For example, imagine you're writing a narrative about your game-winning free throw in the championship game.

  • Here's a moment as a writer that you might want to slow down time to really capture the second-by-second tension produced by the scene.

  • You concentrate.

  • You put the pencil to paper.

  • You really want to slow down time.

  • You write,

  • "I shot the ball in the hoop.

  • Time slowed down. Then we won."

  • To read that, takes two seconds.

  • Therefore, your reader imagines a scene that takes two seconds.

  • Ball goes up, comes down, done.

  • See, even though you wrote, "time slowed down" you didn't achieve that effect for your reader.

  • Just saying it doesn't make it happen.

  • Now, let's take what we make about film.

  • Time slows down with more pictures.

  • And try again.

  • This time write A LOT more.

  • "I bent my knees and held the ball loosely.

  • Letting the ball bounce on the floor once more, I gathered my thoughts.

  • This was the moment.

  • My right arm extended as I released the ball with a gentle flick,

  • it rotated slightly as it arched toward the rim.

  • I held my breath.

  • The ball nudged the back rim,

  • falling through the net with a gentle, satisfying swish.

  • And the crowd exploded from their seats."

  • See, we just slowed down time through our writing.

  • The bottom line is this:

  • There are moments in life that take longer than they actually take.

  • When you're planning out your narrative, think about those moments.

  • Those snippets of life that took longer than the watch:

  • The moment of hearing bad news,

  • the moment of hearing good news,

  • the moment of exhilaration when you realize you hit the jump,

  • or the moment when you realize you aren't going to land it.

  • Once you identify these moments in your narrative, you can use this effect of slow motion when you write.

  • Just remember, it's not enough to say, "time slowed down"

  • and it's not enough to throw a couple adjectives in a sentence and call it done either.

  • Descriptive writing is good writing, that's true.

  • But if you want to express the feeling of slow motion in life,

  • you have to actually take up more physical space on the page.

  • Use more film so to speak.

  • In doing so, you will create tension and keep your reader interested.

  • In that way, the next time you write, you'll control the camera of your own writing.

I got in my first car accident when I was sixteen.

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A2 初級

TED-ED】スローダウンする時間(ライティング&映画の中で) - アーロン・シッツェ (【TED-Ed】Slowing down time (in writing & film) - Aaron Sitze)

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    VoiceTube に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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