Quick Journey to Plot Exercise: Your Turn!
My books are character-driven, so I might say, "Oh, I never plot." But in fact, I've learned to do basic plotting by using a character journey as the big structural apparatus really helps. That is, very basically, what is my character's journey through the story? Like:
Indendence to affiliation
or
Distrust to trust
or
Innocence to corruption
or
Shame to self-acceptance
or where the character starts emotionally/psychologically and where she/he
ends up. Chart the main steps involved:
Beginning: She is devoted to her independence in the first act, and I show
that (how will the reader know this). She should probably be given the choice to
accept help but refuse it.
End of act 1 (maybe around ch. 2): Something (what) happens that makes
her independence more of a problem than a solution. (What happens and how does
she react)
Act 2: Things heat up on the external plane and make her independence or
self-reliance a REAL problem, and she gradually has to change in response to 3-4
events in the external plot. Some group or person should probably be giving her
help, or trying to, or trying to get her to affiliate.
End of Act 2: In the crisis/dark moment, her need to be independent really
complicates the external conflict, and she's in huge trouble (or she's about to
lose her goal or lose something essential). In the dark moment, she has to
choose to change and ask for help or something that compromises her independence
but allows her to receive help from being affiliated with someone or some
group.
Act 3: In the climactic scene, where the external plot resolves, her
newfound willingness to accept help allows her to conquer whatever the main
conflict in the outer plot is.
End of Act 3: Because she has now chosen to affiliate, she is more happy
and safe, but also might keep her independence a bit by becoming not just a
follower but a leader.
That is, you're going to have certain things happen in the external plot.
If you have a sense of what the main character needs to learn and accomplish--
the journey's start and destination-- you can make each of those plot events push
the character down that journey road.
I don't actually plot this out, even in as vestigial an outline as above,
but I try to have a really good sense of where my character starts out, and how
she'll react to each plot event given that starting point, and usually, of
course, the basic endpoint is fairly obvious once I know how she's limited or
damaged at the start.
I like to analyze other people's plots, but my own... I'll get bored if I
outline too deeply. What I'd love to be wild and yet disciplined enough to do is
to write wildly and freely in the first draft, and then use journey, outlining, and
structure to revise it in a second draft.
Alicia
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