How To Add a Productive Element To People-Watching

Writers can hone their observational skills and pluck material.

Jason Schwartzman

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Photo by Timon Studler on Unsplash

A woman I know who lost most of her sight once told me that everyone has what she called a “giveaway.” A tip-off to clue her in that they were there before they’d announced themselves. One person has a heavy walker, another is always doused in cologne, some people just have big mouths, she said, and they’re always yapping. They reveal themselves before too long.

It’s a useful character exercise to think about people you know or encounter in daily life with that lens in mind. Is someone always brushing their hair back with a finger comb? Someone else idly buttoning and unbuttoning the top of their shirt? I remember a guy from college who always had big headphones around his neck but seemingly never up to his ears, as though they were just a prop.

People-watching is typically a fun and light pastime (as is eavesdropping), but it can also be useful, too, for writers, when employed in daily life. I once met a butcher who was invariably prying flecks of meat from between his teeth with a toothpick. Spearing, chiseling, scraping. Always cleaning, even during conversations. It must’ve been so habitual, the constant tasting and flossing throughout this days, he no longer even realized he was doing it. It was…

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Jason Schwartzman

Debut book NO ONE YOU KNOW out now from Outpost19 | Founding Editor, True.Ink | Twitter: @jdschwartzman | outpost19.com/NoOneYouKnow/