Where Characters Begin
Wounds, questions, and the psychology behind believable fiction
Most stories begin with plot. Mine tend to begin with a question about a person.
Why does someone act the way they do? Why do two people, faced with the same circumstances, make entirely different choices? And why do certain characters feel unmistakably real while others remain little more than names moving through events?
When I began writing long-form fiction, I discovered that the answer rarely lies in plot alone. It lies in psychology—specifically in the hidden motivations that grow from early wounds and shape how a character understands the world.
Life taught me that people act the way they do because of deep-seated motivations born from early wounds—drivers that shape everything that follows. That realization became a guiding principle for me both in my professional life and in storytelling.
My focus in crafting compelling characters lies in their psychological realism.
Most fiction writers aim to create believable characters, and I suspect the most successful ones do so by consciously—or unconsciously—following psychological patterns.
During a recent writing course, I was tasked with developing an entirely new story idea from scratch. To illustrate my process, I’ll use Donnán, a character I created for that assignment. Calling it my process may be an overstatement—I haven’t invented anything new—but the exercise confirmed that this approach works well for me.
This is not meant as a how-to guide so much as a reflection on how I did it.
The Psychological Spine of Character
Most compelling fictional characters share a small set of underlying psychological variables. Writers often discover these intuitively, but they closely align with ideas explored by psychologists such as Alfred Adler, Carl Jung, and Erik Erikson.
These elements appear again and again in enduring characters:
• a formative wound
• a central belief about the world
• a coping strategy
• a core desire
• an internal contradiction
• a moment when the strategy stops working
• a revised understanding of self or reality
Together they form the psychological spine of a character arc.
The Character Wound
Alfred Adler proposed that personality often grows from an early sense of injury or deficiency. People develop strategies to compensate for that wound, and those strategies gradually become their personality.
In fiction, this looks strikingly similar to character design. What psychology describes as “early inferiority” becomes what writers call a character wound. Compensatory striving becomes motivation, and lifestyle patterns become personality traits.
The first step in my process is identifying the character’s early wound.
For Donnán, it begins when he is sent away as a child to be raised in a monastery. The practice itself was common in seventh-century Ireland. What matters is not the cultural norm but how the child interprets the experience.
Donnán asks why he has been sent away. No one answers him.
He is told only that it was “meant to be.”
Over time, that unanswered question becomes the emotional center of his life.
The Character’s Worldview
A wound does more than provide backstory. It shapes how a character interprets the world.
If someone experiences betrayal, they may believe no one can be trusted. Someone who was abandoned may feel compelled to prove their worth. A person who hides weakness may have once been humiliated for showing it.
Donnán’s wound leads him to believe that truth is something withheld by authority. If no one will answer his questions, then answers must be pursued rather than accepted.
The monks who raise him reinforce this belief by discouraging inquiry. Acceptance, they suggest, is more virtuous than questioning.
For Donnán, that lesson never takes root.
Instead, the unanswered question becomes the lens through which he interprets everything.
A Coping Strategy
If the child believes he is not worthy of the truth, the adult may spend his life trying to prove otherwise.
Donnán’s coping strategy becomes relentless questioning. He tests ideas, challenges authority, and searches for explanations where others accept tradition.
This strategy gradually becomes his personality pattern.
Psychologist Erik Erikson described identity as forming through a series of existential questions. Who am I? Can I trust the world? Do I have a purpose?
Donnán’s psychological question might be framed this way:
Can truth be trusted when authority controls knowledge?
A question like that naturally generates plot.
Internal Tension
Carl Jung suggested that personality develops through tension between opposing forces.
For Donnán, those tensions include:
faith → inquiry
acceptance → questioning
belonging → independence
Stories emerge when a character cannot reconcile such opposites.
Donnán longs for acceptance within his faith, yet he cannot stop questioning the foundations of that faith. At the same time, he hopes to prove that fate does not dictate human lives.
That tension drives the story forward.
The Breaking Point
Eventually the character’s strategy must fail.
Donnán begins with a simple belief: if he pursues a question far enough, the truth will reveal itself.
His lifelong challenge to fate grows from that belief. If fate dictates events, then questioning it should expose its limits.
But the question driving him is smaller—and far more personal.
Why was I given away?
He believes that if he can prove free will exists, then his parents must have chosen to send him away. And if they chose, then there must have been a reason.
He wants the reason.
But the answer is forever denied to him.
At that moment he discovers something painful:
truth and answers are not the same thing.
Transformation
Donnán spends much of his life trying to prove that fate does not rule everything. In the end he discovers something more subtle.
The absence of answers is not fate.
It is simply the boundary of being human.
He may never learn why he was sent away, but he can decide what that unanswered question will mean for the rest of his life. That decision—how he interprets the silence—becomes the one place where his freedom truly exists.
Through that realization the character arrives at a new understanding of the world, completing the arc.
Closing Thoughts
This essay outlines one way of developing character motivation and its role in shaping a story. It represents only one piece of my broader creative process, but it is a method I find myself returning to again and again.
For me, characters must feel psychologically real. I need to understand their origins and perspectives—even if I disagree with them.
Psychological models provide useful frameworks for exploring motivation, but they are not substitutes for imagination. At their best, they simply help writers articulate patterns they may already sense.
For me, the Enneagram has also proven to be a helpful tool for grounding character psychology—but that is a subject for another essay.
What I discovered in building Donnán is something that now feels obvious in hindsight: characters are not constructed from traits, but from questions. Somewhere in their past something happened that left the world slightly unresolved. The rest of their life becomes an attempt—conscious or not—to answer that question.
For writers, understanding that question changes everything. Plot no longer feels like something imposed from the outside. Instead, it grows naturally from the character’s search for meaning.
And sometimes the most powerful discovery a character can make is not the answer they were seeking, but the realization that some questions remain unanswered—and that life must still be lived in their shadow.
How do you begin building your characters?
Do you start with personality traits, with plot, or with something deeper—perhaps a wound, a belief, or a question that refuses to go away?
I’d love to hear how other writers approach this process.





The secret to keep a character interesting is to stay surprised by them yourself, Charles Dickens. Always a neat trick if you can pull it off.
I totally agree! I will always remember when I first exclaimed to my protagonist, "Are you kidding me?" While the motivations etc may not surprise me, her actions certainly can. John, thanks for the words of wisdom.