“Synaesthesia,
in its simplest form, is best described as a “union of the senses”
whereby two or more of the five senses that are normally experienced
separately are involuntarily and automatically joined together.”-
UK Synaesthesia
See
http://www.uksynaesthesia.com/
for more info.
At
a recent writer's group, a member explained this condition. A person
affected by synaesthesia might see a certain colour and imagine
hearing a particular sound, or might experience a certain event that
they would then describe with a colour. The writer at our group had
developed a writing exercise based on the notion of a colour linking
to some of the other senses. She provided a range of pictures and
asked us each to pick one that intrigued us. The ten minute exercise:
Link the picture and the theme of synaesthesia within a story.
I
didn't totally get it, to be honest, but I gave it a shot. Here's the
picture I picked:
Here's
the writing I wrote.
Jane
sat at the kitchen work surface, surrounded by food. She had starved
herself for two days, as a personal challenge. Her hands shook as she
laid out the fruit and veg on the table.
Her
hunger pangs had driven her senses to a heightened level. Tiredness
had made her ravenous and now, with the uncooked banquet in front of
her, consumption was paramount. But something was different. She
picked up a carrot, still caked in dried soil, and bit into it.
She
was no longer sat in her kitchen. Her work surface dissolved into
hard mud. She could see the sky above her, the earth ploughed into
rows, a distant tractor coughing out dirt and uprooting vegetables.
She
chewed as the crows cried out above her head.
When
she swallowed, she was jammed back into her kitchen chair in an
instant. To her left, in a bed of crushed ice, lay a solitary dead
haddock. She looked at the fish. It looked at her. She scooped it up
in one hand. They stared face-to-face. Her work surface morphed into
corrugated iron. A motor churned loudly.
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