The Middle of Your Story
The middle of your story is hard.
As technically difficult as beginnings are, in some ways they’re much
easier. Beginnings have enthusiasm and excitement attached to them.
And endings, assuming we get that far, are much easier too. We can see
the end in sight, our goal is nearly in reach, it’s easy to keep going for it.
But middles are hard. (And by middles I’m talking about maybe the middle 80% of the project! That is, 10% is the
fun exciting beginning, and 10% is the rewarding ending, but the middle is 80%.)
When you’re in the middle of your project, the initial enthusiasm and excitement are gone, so they can’t sustain
you. And the end is nowhere near, so that can’t sustain you either. All we’re left with is the slog, the hard
work.
As I share in the page on how to plot a novel, writers are either
Outliners (who have a plan) or Wingers (who don’t).
Both Outliners and Wingers can have difficulties with middles, although the exact difficulties are different.
(Check out software to help regardless which you are.)
Wingers can find that they run out of ideas. They can find themselves wandering around in the desert, totally
lost, with no clue what to do next.
Outliners at least have a road map - their problem is that they can run out of enthusiasm. There’s no novelty to
the story any more.

If you’re an Outliner, ask yourself if the next step in the plot is really the best possible one. (Although you’ve
outlined, it’s important still to be flexible. The outline should be a guide, not a tourniquet.). You could
brainstorm (using the ideas below) other ideas, and if you come up with better ones, use those. These changes might
mean reworking the whole outline, but perhaps that might be okay, for a better story.
If, after brainstorming, you still like your first ideas better, then it’s just a problem with inertia.
Use EFT to get over the hump, again as described below.
Wingers (and Outliners who want to), could try these suggestions:
-
As per Raymond Chandler’s advice: When you’re stuck, bring on a man with a gun. Since Chandler wrote
the Philip Marlowe Private Eye stories, he probably meant that literally. A man with a gun mightn’t suit
your story (although it’d certainly shake it up!).
But it’s good advice on a broader level: make something interesting happen.
Brainstorm what could happen next (using EFT if you
like). Make it something that’ll have repercussions for your characters. If it’s the postman arriving, let
the letter be something important, not just the electricity bill!
This technique could bring you into all sorts of wonderful strands for your story.
(Of course, the Outliners would mutter darkly that those strands will probably entrap you, and you’ll
never get out. That’s the risk you take!)
- Ask yourself: What if … and end that sentence as many ways as possible. As in all brainstorming,
don’t limit yourself, no matter how mad the idea sounds. No, you won’t really use ‘Aliens land’ in contemporary
fiction, but write it down anyway.
- Ask yourself: What’s the worst possible thing that could happen to my character now?, and have that
happen! It’s not for nothing that one definition of being a writer is somebody who makes up characters and then
tortures them.
- Freewrite. Just write, and keep writing. No matter what, don’t let your pen
stop moving. Write (say): I don’t know what happens next. Jane needs to find her way out of the locked room,
but I’ve no idea how she’ll do that. I mean, I’ve absolutely no idea, and there’s no way I’ll think of
something. It’s just impossible. I wish I hadn’t put her in the locked room in the first place. Maybe she could
dig her way out. But that’s silly …Keep going with this - after a while your subconscious will
conjure up a gem or two. It’s amazing when it happens, and great fun.
- Use EFT. Full instructions are given here, but basically it’s about tapping on acupuncture points. Follow the
instructions as you say statements like: I don’t know what happens next - I have no idea how Jane will get out
of the locked room - it seems impossible for her to do that - I choose to find the most amazing solution - but
I don’t know what it is yet …

For both Outliners and Wingers, sometimes the problem is just fatigue and doubt. In both of those cases, check
out EFT - it’ll get you sorted in no time.
Also, what has helped me is to simply accept that the middle is hard, and to carry on regardless.
I think the problem is that we don’t accept that, so we’re fighting both the drudgery of the work, AND our
resistance to that fact. At some level we’re saying, It shouldn’t be like this. Where’s the excitement gone? I
resent doing this even though there’s no pleasure in it for me right now.
And fighting those two things is too much.
Whereas if we just accept that middles are hard, and boring and drudgery to some extent, and carry on regardless
- that way lies success.
Accept the fact without fighting it, that you don’t want to do the work today - and do it anyway. Don’t try to
make yourself want to do it, that’s a hurdle too far. But like the ad says, “Just do it”.
It’s a subtle thing, but it IS much easier to do something if you stop resenting it, or rather if you accept the
fact that you resent it.
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