You’re at the airport, waiting to board your flight. You’re looking at the schedule for tomorrow’s conference. That little headache is getting worse, and your aspirin is at the bottom of your suitcase. A garbled voice announces a cancelled flight; was it yours? You’re pretty sure you turned off the oven, but not really sure.
I’ve just described a realistic, if busy, morning. Dealing with each problem one at a time is simple. Call your husband about the oven. Go ask someone about the flight. Reread your conference schedule. By now, you probably don’t even need the aspirin. Life is rarely that calm, though; too often, everything happens at once and the headache is a killer. You’re stressed, and you’re tense.
Okay, this isn’t such a good place to be in real life. In fiction, though? Tension is just what the doctor ordered!
Plotting a scene is hard; merging all the necessary elements can feel close to impossible. What a writer often ends up with is several paragraphs on the first problem—say the conference schedule. They might follow those paragraphs up with a few more, dealing with the flight announcement. Several bits later, they stick in the thought about the oven, and the character makes the phone call to her husband. Finally, the headache, which made a brief appearance in paragraph one and has mysteriously disappeared for two pages, comes back. It’s blindingly painful for the character and absolutely unexpected for the reader.
This kind of writing is fine for the first draft; you’re getting all the issues onto paper. In the next pass, though, start mixing things up. In your mind, or for real, cut the pages up and toss the pieces into the air. See where they fall. Shove a stick into the mess and make it even worse. Now rewrite.
This isn’t an easy task; you’ll probably end up with a nice headache of your own. In the end, though, your character’s day and your scene are going to be complicated and complex...yes, stressful. What could be better?
Becky is happy to answer questions and chat by email. Contact her through her website: www.beckylevine.com
Recent Comments