: End the prologue with a line or an action that ensures the characters can never go back to the way things were in Part 1.
: Often, when a narrator labels a character as "crazy," it is a defense mechanism. It is easier to call a son crazy than it is to admit we do not understand the architecture of his mind.
To write under a self-deprecating or aggressive pseudonym is a deliberate choice. It tells the reader immediately: I am not here to give you a sanitized, polite version of the truth.
If this is a specific indie web-novel, a niche forum post, or a prompt you are actively developing, it touches on themes of chaotic family dynamics, psychological tension, and unapologetic self-expression.
While there is no widely known, authoritative literary piece or viral blog post titled , the prompt strongly channels the energy of underground internet fiction, raw slice-of-life blogging, or experimental storytelling.
There is a specific kind of liberation that comes from adopting a moniker like "Crazy Wanker" to tell a story about a "Crazy Son." It strips away the polished, safe veneer of mainstream literature and dives headfirst into the messy, uncomfortable, and deeply human corners of our minds.
: Move away from exposition. Describe the smell of the room, the twitch in the son's jaw, or the heavy, ringing silence after an argument.