In working on a scene yesterday, in my notes I said something like, what I need to do here is to establish the setting.
And then I stopped. I rephrased it. What the story needs here is .... and that felt like an important shift in perspective.
Very often I'll say or think about what I want to have happen or how to approach what happens in a story. I hear it from others frequently. To write about X, they'll say, I need to tell them about Y.
That's a warning signal of an impending infodump, but it's really more significant than that. Writing the story, especially in its later stages as it nears completion, shouldn't be about what I want. It should be about what the story needs, what the scene needs, what a character wants or needs.
Now, maybe this seems painfully obvious to some folks, but I'm finding it helpful to take myself out. Or, more accurately, to move the focus to the scene, character, story. When I'm thinking about what *I* believe is needed or even what is interesting, I'm more likely to include the superfluous, more likely to slow things down or create distractions. When I focus on what a scene needs, I'm more economical. It also makes clearer that whether or not it's interesting is up to me as the writer. The scene itself--or the character, setting, plot twist, whatever--isn't intrinsically interesting or dull. If it needs to be there, then it's up to me to make the presentation of that interesting.
I realize the separation is somewhat artificial, a contrivance. But I still find it helpful, so I'll contrive away. When I catch myself (can't always do that; I'm a slippery devil) talking about what I need to do here, I shall stop dead and ask instead what the scene needs. FWIW, this seems to be a bit more useful when revising than when plotting or writing a first draft.
And then I stopped. I rephrased it. What the story needs here is .... and that felt like an important shift in perspective.
Very often I'll say or think about what I want to have happen or how to approach what happens in a story. I hear it from others frequently. To write about X, they'll say, I need to tell them about Y.
That's a warning signal of an impending infodump, but it's really more significant than that. Writing the story, especially in its later stages as it nears completion, shouldn't be about what I want. It should be about what the story needs, what the scene needs, what a character wants or needs.
Now, maybe this seems painfully obvious to some folks, but I'm finding it helpful to take myself out. Or, more accurately, to move the focus to the scene, character, story. When I'm thinking about what *I* believe is needed or even what is interesting, I'm more likely to include the superfluous, more likely to slow things down or create distractions. When I focus on what a scene needs, I'm more economical. It also makes clearer that whether or not it's interesting is up to me as the writer. The scene itself--or the character, setting, plot twist, whatever--isn't intrinsically interesting or dull. If it needs to be there, then it's up to me to make the presentation of that interesting.
I realize the separation is somewhat artificial, a contrivance. But I still find it helpful, so I'll contrive away. When I catch myself (can't always do that; I'm a slippery devil) talking about what I need to do here, I shall stop dead and ask instead what the scene needs. FWIW, this seems to be a bit more useful when revising than when plotting or writing a first draft.