AAA The First Step in The Hero's Journey
AAA The First Step in The Hero's Journey
AAA The First Step in The Hero's Journey
From The Odyssey to Star Wars to Toy Story, the Hero's Journey is the foundation of millennia
of storytelling. But before any hero can embark on their journey, they must start in the ordinary
world.
How can you leverage this world and the hero's journey in your own writing?
In storytelling, the hero's journey has to do with the stages of the hero as researched by Joseph
Campbell and Christopher Vogler. Decades ago, these two storytelling experts identified several
common trends that appear in great works from every generation and every culture.
One of those trends is structure.
Thankfully this structure has a proven track record of success. This successful record is so long,
in fact, that we don't know when it started.
And it all begins with a person living an ordinary life.
The Ordinary World is the first step in the Hero's Journey. There
are three foolproof ways to create this world in your story.
3 Ways to Create Your Ordinary World
How does this apply to the stories you're telling? Include these three elements of the Ordinary
World into your Hero's Journey in order to bring your hero low before they begin the climb to
greatness.
1. Upset the parent structure
To keep things fresh, don't just “kill them off.” Maybe one is missing. Maybe the parents are
divorced and mom/dad remarried, while the other is off on some adventure.
A great example of innovation within this element is Guardians of the Galaxy vol. 2, where Peter
Quill's journey (as an orphan, mind you) takes him back to his father with plenty of twists along
the way.
Another example is The Hunger Games. As I mentioned above, Katniss has to play the parental
role while her mother seems lost in a deep depression after the death of her husband and Katniss'
father. While Katniss's mother is not dead, she is functionally dead and not filling the mentor
role normally handled by parents.
Again, the reason this archetype works so well is because so many of us have parents who are
absent in body, mind, or both. So many of us have struggled on our own Hero's Journey of
responsibility because one or both of our parents dropped the ball.
We know just how disadvantageous inadequate or absent parents can be.
When a character has both characters in place and those parents are supportive, gracious, loving,
and most importantly, present, what disadvantage do they have?
Answer: Several.
But you'll need to make it clear that supportive parents are ill-equipped to tackle the conflict in
the story. Make sure you know where your character stands when it comes to support vs.
alienation, as this directly ties into your story's stakes!
2. Lower the expectations
In the beginning, no one can know how heroic your protagonist will be. Don't fall victim to
cheesy irony or heavy-handed foreshadowing. Keep your hero low, and bury them in the
judgment of the community.
If you've ever lived in a small town, you know exactly what I'm talking about. The same can be
said for the community, or “World,” itself. Often a community will expect nothing of itself
because no one expects anything of it. It is its own special world where the rules are different,
but not in a favorable way.
Think about that town you grew up near that was “trash.” Maybe it was your town. What effect
does that have on its people?
Remember: Luke comes from Tattoine, a desolate rock floating in the outer regions of space.
He's a nobody.
Katniss Everdeen hails from District 12, the armpit of Panem. Its claim to fame is coal mining,
the career that killed Katniss' father. She, too, is a nobody.
Find unique ways to make your hero a nobody. Then surround them with allies, partners,
bandmates who are also nobodies.
Readers love an underdog story, and to tell one you've got to make sure you create a clear idea in
the reader's mind what “under” truly means.
3. Create a false sense of security
As the writer, you know conflict is coming. It has to come, either from within or without.
But the community, and possibly your hero, can't know it yet. Everything needs to seem happy
and fine.
Remember that the effect of this false sense of security is suspense, a priceless effect you want to
provide your readers whenever possible. Then, when comforts come undone and the world as we
know it is destroyed, you'll unlock the dramatic potential of your story's core value.
If you want that huge payoff when your hero returns victorious at the story's end, then you'll
need to build the suspense and sketch that arc starting at the very beginning.
PRACTICE
Put the Hero's Journey into action by writing your own story using the Hero's Journey
framework.
Start to create your own Ordinary World! Get started by freewriting for fifteen minutes based on
these questions:
Where are your character's parents? (Hint: they're probably not home creating a
happy, secure family)
Why are people's expectations for your character so low? (Maybe they're a farmhand,
or a servant, or a short-order cook at Waffle House, or an average but not exceptional
student)
What is the story's core value? How does the hero pursue it in boring everyday
life? (Bonus points if there's a hidden threat to this core value your protagonist doesn't yet
know about)
Take fifteen minutes to answer one or more of the questions above. If you have extra time, start
writing the beginning of your story.
Write your Practice in the box below. When you're done, don't forget to support your fellow
writers by commenting on someone else's work, too!
https://thewritepractice.com/heros-journey-ordinary-world/