There were no questions for O’Abby this week. I guess everyone is busy doing #NaNo! Like I am…
We’re well into week two now, and if you’re working at the
pace to finish your 50K by 30 November you should be hitting the 20K mark
around now. But don’t worry if you’re
not there yet. There’s still time to
catch up. Personally, I don’t get a lot
of writing time during the week, so I tend to blitz my word count during the
weekends. I have also been taking one
day off work per week to write, and that’s definite motivation to crank out
those words.
Just do whatever works for you and make the most of whatever
time you can scratch together.
Around about this time is where I often feel like my story
is stagnating so I thought I’d give you a few ideas for ways to shake things up
a little in your story. Ideas for how to
push your characters into doing something new that might move things along in a
significant way.
- A character close to your protagonist dies
- A potentially life-altering secret is revealed
- Your protagonist loses something valuable
- Some kind of natural disaster occurs
- Someone has an accident
- Someone moves to a new city/country/house
- A monster – human or otherwise – enters your protagonist’s world
- A random act of kindness
- A crime is committed
These are just some ideas that might help push your
characters. They don’t need to happen to
your protagonist directly – sometimes something dramatic happening to one of
your secondary characters will motivate your MC more than if it happened to them
directly.
The point is to shake things up to propel your MC into some
kind of action. And whatever obstacle you
put in their way, whatever challenge, make sure it isn’t easy to overcome. Your characters need to struggle. They need to make the wrong decisions more
often than the right ones. Every choice
they make needs to make things more difficult for them, throw up more
challenges for them to face.
Hopefully this will be helpful if you reach a point where
you feel flummoxed and can’t move on. If
there are no questions for O’Abby next week, I’ll share some more tips for
getting past potential roadblocks to finishing.
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