Story ideas aren't scarce. The art is in noticing them as they occur, refraining from instantly rejecting them, and taking note of them so as to remember them later. It's less an art and more a habit, one I've spent conscious effort trying to foment. That sort of effort is probably where the small spiral flip-book full of story prompt sentences that I found in my bookbag came from.
One of those sentences was, "A man and a woman arguing over whose fault it was that the Saints lost this week." It was probably inspired by the Bud Lite "Very Superstitious" series of commercials, with the tag line, "It's not weird if it works!" What if it really did work? Would failure to perform the superstitious act cause a loss? How would this change the dynamics and culture of professional sports?
Those are questions that deserve thoughtful, world-building answers, for which I fear you must search elsewhere. Instead, I give you Rhonda and Edward: Argumentative, comical, terribly earnest, and as devoted as any Saints fan who ever attended a game wearing a paper bag over their head, or who chanted "The Saints ain't the Ain'ts anymore!" in hopes that shouting it louder would make it true.
During the revision, I replaced the original couch pillow with a scarf. For one thing, I didn't want anyone thinking I actually meant the sacred Ernie & Antoinette K-Doe pillow. The K-Doe pillow is serious mojo, and I would not presume. For another, I had to think in terms of possible cover art. I don't have a suitable pillow to photograph, but I do have a fleur-de-lis scarf that I knit out of black and gold ribbon yarn. So that's what became the catalyst for Rhonda and Ed's argument, and that's what's featured on the cover of this week's fictionette.
YOU ARE READING
It's Not Weird If It Works (Excerpt)
Short StoryWhen winning is everyone's responsibility, losing could be anyone's fault. Who let the team down this time?