About a half an hour into her first plot consultation, the writer at the other end of the telephone settles into the process. I know something of her initial nervousness ~ the fear of not being good enough, not having done enough prep work, not being smart enough to grasp what is required.Â
In anticipation of this, I jump right in, pulling the writer along with me.Â
My immediate impression? She is drowning in ideas and plot lines. Her story incorporates suspense and romance, some mystery and lots of thematic issues. Before she goes all the way under, I catch her hand.Â
Once I determine that the main plot thread for her project is mystery, I ask her to briefly recount all the scenes that advance that plot line. While she does that, I plot her scenes out on a Plot Planner for her individual project (which I mail the next day). Scene by scene, the weight of all those loose ends, straining to strangle her, lift.
As soon as we have the mystery plot line in place, it is easy to see the underlying structure of her story. And, lo and behold, the three most important scenes ~ the end of the beginning scene, the crisis, and the climax ~ were there and right where they ought to be. Ah, the magic of writing. This mystery writer’s sense of relief is palpatable over the telephone.Â
Of course, she still has lots of work to do, but this reveal reinforces my conviction that the answers are always right there in our stories. Finding them is the job of the writer (and sometimes along with the help of the plot whisperer).
When you’re drowning in plotlines, blind from too many words, lost in your story and pulling your hair out, stop and take a breath. Then get out an oversized piece of paper and create a Plot Plannerfor yourself. Start with one plot thread. Hang it on the wall. Stand back and look. See if you don’t feel a sense of relief wash over you, too.
Your generosity in sharing all this overwhelms me but it keeps me moving forward on my story and helps me to know that I will finish my first draft someday and then I'll get started with some REAL work (but I'll be able to do it!). Thank you!!!
The amazing thing about this blog, more particularly your immediate observation of your client's challenge was that she was drowning in plot lines and ideas.
Boy had she done a lot of brainstorming!!!
This is evidenced by the fact that you could bring fresh eyes to her work and pick out the 3 most important scenes.
My point is that she had written so much BEFORE coming to you.
It's easier to cut than to come up with ideas in a rush.
As writers we have to write pages and pages to get that one sentence that simply sings. Or as in this case, create many many scenes for a consultant such as you, Martha, to show us where to go next.
In short, we cannot be stingy or miserly with our writing.
Generosity at the outset of our project brings much to bloom towards the end.
Brainstorming is the key.
Thanks so much.