The writing method of "If I Become a Cat" is as follows:
1. Imagine and set the situation: use your brain and imagine yourself becoming a cat Various scenarios that may occur. You can start with the little things around you and imagine how to adapt to the new environment after becoming a cat, how to get along with other cats, how to face humans, etc.
2. Describe your own changes: In your imagination, you have to turn yourself into a cat and describe the impact of this change on your life. You can start from aspects such as body, behavior, habits, preferences, etc., to let readers feel the authenticity of you becoming a cat.
3. Depicting details: When describing the process of turning yourself into a cat, you must pay attention to the details. For example, you can describe your actions such as chasing butterflies in the garden, climbing up and down trees, napping on the sofa, etc., to give readers a deeper understanding of your life after becoming a cat.
4. Express emotions: In the article, you should express your emotional experience after becoming a cat. You can describe your fear of the new environment, your desire for freedom, your friendship with other cats, etc., so that readers can feel your inner world after becoming a cat.
5. Summary and reflection: You should summarize and reflect on the article, and express your thoughts and feelings about the experience of becoming a cat. You can explore issues such as the relationship between humans and animals, the balance between freedom and restraint, etc., so that readers can get more inspiration and thinking during the reading process.
Commonly used techniques in imaginative compositions:
1. Exaggeration and deformation: Use exaggeration and deformation to create strange and absurd plots and images, arousing readers' interest and curiosity. For example, you can exaggerate and transform an ordinary object or scene to make it huge, tiny, soft, or hard, thereby creating a dreamlike atmosphere.
2. Collage and fusion: collage and fuse different elements, scenes or images to create novel and interesting plots and images. You can extract elements from real life, or draw inspiration from literature, history, mythology, etc., and fuse them together to form a unique imaginary space.
3. Endow non-living things with emotions and thinking: Endow non-living things with emotions and thinking, so that they have human characteristics and emotions, and create sympathetic and imaginative images. For example, you can imbue animals, plants, or inanimate objects with human emotions and thoughts, or imbue them with some mysterious power and wisdom.
4. Dreams and hallucinations: Through the use of dreams and hallucinations, the inner world and emotional changes of the protagonist are shown, creating an atmosphere that is both real and illusory. You can describe the protagonist's dreams or hallucinations and show his inner desires, fears, or contradictions, thereby deepening the reader's understanding and sympathy for the protagonist.