Writing Handling extremely sensitive subject matter in fiction... how?

CinnaSloth

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I won't talk about what I think is right, or wrong according to society or politics, just my own thoughts.

Obviously, things like r*pe, and m*rder, and gen*cide is wrong -along with a ton of other bullsh*t that if people saw happening in the streets there'd be all kinds of people blowing up police telephones and rioting in the streets.

But what we do here, this is fiction, unless told otherwise, but even 'based on real events' has its dramatizations, and fabrications to tell a better story, which then on that note, basically turns it into either informative news, or propaganda, depending on which side of the fence you sit on.
There is no single which way to write a story. Every story has an antagonist, a badguy, a problem, or issue that is villainized, or "problematic", because that is just what they are, problems; A Villain; Something needed to be conquered, vanquished, or dealt with.

Certain issues are heavy. period. That's just reality. So, that particular issue, that is supposed to BE heavy, and difficult, and complex to the point of feeling like you're F**KING suffocating underwater, ...dramatic pause... SHOULD FEEL LIKE YOU'RE F**KING DROWNING UNDERWATER. Otherwise, even though you are tip-toing around it, you're stepping on the toes that have endured those topics. If a writer CAN'T handle those topics, they shouldn't be writing them in the first place. Imagine character-A gets maliciously r*ped, and afterward he's just like 'yea that happened, it's fine" two chapters later. That's a load of bull. There should be deep emotional trauma, hate, anger, self-loathing, thoughts of su**ide. SOMETHING!!! Something that -not even to makes the reader feel for this character, but the character themselves feel about the event because victims of such circumstances ARE in fact scarred by these things. People get burned by life, and by other people, and IT IS NOT OKAY. They are not little happy campers shrugging it off.. IT SUCKS! So, make it suck! IT'S DEVISTATING, so make it devastating!

Villains will do villainous sh*t.
killers are going to kill.
A**holes are going to be politicians.
And Heroes.. will be.. f**king.. heroic! -or, tragically, die trying..

I am unapologetic about my writing. There are warnings in the description. There are tags for a reason. Open the pages, and if readers doesn't like what they see, that's their issue. Nobody told them to open my book. If anything, I tried to deter them from reading. I've pushed people away. There's a lot of things wrong with my book, but I never claimed it would be a fun rollercoaster. If something feels like it should be heavy, I will write it as such; Dark, malicious, aggressive thoughts in tow because that's how it should be.


HEAVY IS HEAVY..
 

L1aei

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I won't talk about what I think is right, or wrong according to society or politics, just my own thoughts.

Obviously, things like r*pe, and m*rder, and gen*cide is wrong -along with a ton of other bullsh*t that if people saw happening in the streets there'd be all kinds of people blowing up police telephones and rioting in the streets.

But what we do here, this is fiction, unless told otherwise, but even 'based on real events' has its dramatizations, and fabrications to tell a better story, which then on that note, basically turns it into either informative news, or propaganda, depending on which side of the fence you sit on.
There is no single which way to write a story. Every story has an antagonist, a badguy, a problem, or issue that is villainized, or "problematic", because that is just what they are, problems; A Villain; Something needed to be conquered, vanquished, or dealt with.

Certain issues are heavy. period. That's just reality. So, that particular issue, that is supposed to BE heavy, and difficult, and complex to the point of feeling like you're F**KING suffocating underwater, ...dramatic pause... SHOULD FEEL LIKE YOU'RE F**KING DROWNING UNDERWATER. Otherwise, even though you are tip-toing around it, you're stepping on the toes that have endured those topics. If a writer CAN'T handle those topics, they shouldn't be writing them in the first place. Imagine character-A gets maliciously r*ped, and afterward he's just like 'yea that happened, it's fine" two chapters later. That's a load of bull. There should be deep emotional trauma, hate, anger, self-loathing, thoughts of su**ide. SOMETHING!!! Something that -not even to makes the reader feel for this character, but the character themselves feel about the event because victims of such circumstances ARE in fact scarred by these things. People get burned by life, and by other people, and IT IS NOT OKAY. They are not little happy campers shrugging it off.. IT SUCKS! So, make it suck! IT'S DEVISTATING, so make it devastating!

Villains will do villainous sh*t.
killers are going to kill.
A**holes are going to be politicians.
And Heroes.. will be.. f**king.. heroic! -or, tragically, die trying..

I am unapologetic about my writing. There are warnings in the description. There are tags for a reason. Open the pages, and if readers doesn't like what they see, that's their issue. Nobody told them to open my book. If anything, I tried to deter them from reading. I've pushed people away. There's a lot of things wrong with my book, but I never claimed it would be a fun rollercoaster. If something feels like it should be heavy, I will write it as such; Dark, malicious, aggressive thoughts in tow because that's how it should be.


HEAVY IS HEAVY..

Yeah, I get that; dark things should feel dark. If readers can't handle sleeping without the nightlight on, then they shouldn't claim they're mature enough to handle mature crap.

But that's just... it's one side of the dimension over my curiosity.

Again, yes, if anyone's story includes something devastating, it shouldn't be brushed off like... well, I know a few people who'd scream bloody murder at a stubbed toe. You get my point on it; consequences, trauma, emotional weight, that's part of writing it honestly instead of turning it into some set dressing. If not, well, it otherwise does feel fake, or worse, as you said very well, trivializing.


Where I am blindly feeling in the dark isn’t whether dark things should feel dark. Hell, I hope do dear God most of us agree there. It's more about how that baggage is delivered on our pages.

Two stories can both treat something as horrific and life-altering, but one might focus on aftermath and internal fallout while another might linger in the moment itself. There are even those that might use distance and another might be immersing into it.

Seriously, both can be, well, serious. But the reader experience and the risk of something feeling exploitative vs. purposeful can change a lot depending on those choices. So I'm less on the whole point of don’t write heavy things side (not really my stance here at all) and more on writing its... execution? I think that's the correct term I'm looking for here. Like where the camera sits in this dark place, how much is shown vs. implied, how the scene frames it, how consequences are handled beyond just intensity.

Your point about not softening things into nothing is pretty damn fair. I think the other side of that darkness is making sure the portrayal serves character and story, not just impact; we've got that going on in @Corty 's story, that gal the party is in, she's got that baggage she carries with her and it's not something she parades around but is always on her back within plain sight.

That's it, though. tension between honest weight and how it is presented from within that dark moment is the part I am interested in hearing more about; the different approaches on navigating through darkness readers probably are opening their eyes as wide as saucers just to comprehend it. See what I mean?
 

CinnaSloth

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Yeah, I get that; dark things should feel dark. If readers can't handle sleeping without the nightlight on, then they shouldn't claim they're mature enough to handle mature crap.

But that's just... it's one side of the dimension over my curiosity.

Again, yes, if anyone's story includes something devastating, it shouldn't be brushed off like... well, I know a few people who'd scream bloody murder at a stubbed toe. You get my point on it; consequences, trauma, emotional weight, that's part of writing it honestly instead of turning it into some set dressing. If not, well, it otherwise does feel fake, or worse, as you said very well, trivializing.


Where I am blindly feeling in the dark isn’t whether dark things should feel dark. Hell, I hope do dear God most of us agree there. It's more about how that baggage is delivered on our pages.

Two stories can both treat something as horrific and life-altering, but one might focus on aftermath and internal fallout while another might linger in the moment itself. There are even those that might use distance and another might be immersing into it.

Seriously, both can be, well, serious. But the reader experience and the risk of something feeling exploitative vs. purposeful can change a lot depending on those choices. So I'm less on the whole point of don’t write heavy things side (not really my stance here at all) and more on writing its... execution? I think that's the correct term I'm looking for here. Like where the camera sits in this dark place, how much is shown vs. implied, how the scene frames it, how consequences are handled beyond just intensity.

Your point about not softening things into nothing is pretty damn fair. I think the other side of that darkness is making sure the portrayal serves character and story, not just impact; we've got that going on in @Corty 's story, that gal the party is in, she's got that baggage she carries with her and it's not something she parades around but is always on her back within plain sight.

That's it, though. tension between honest weight and how it is presented from within that dark moment is the part I am interested in hearing more about; the different approaches on navigating through darkness readers probably are opening their eyes as wide as saucers just to comprehend it. See what I mean?
Depending on how long the story takes to go through the event that's either really mind breaking or just upsetting I'd like to imagine most* (Heavy on the asterisk) would leave it (the event) to a single chapter, or a few paragraphs at most, and the aftermath of emotional trauma/ healing would take at the very least double to triple the time to express why it was bad, and the steps forward.
If the event takes longer than that.. that's just torture p*rn, and I better see a hell of a much longer healing time/ full entire ARCS of expressing the character's PTSD and trauma, and explaining that it was a horrible experience.
but then again.. there's some freakin psycho sickos out there that think bloodplay, and amputation is sexy???? and I'm just not into that. Gore, even in horror is one thing, but looking at it with those kinds of eyes... that's probably something worth seeing a therapist about. Yes, i'm kink shaming. IF that's your kink, whoever's reading this, bruh.. Really?
 

L1aei

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Depending on how long the story takes to go through the event that's either really mind breaking or just upsetting I'd like to imagine most* (Heavy on the asterisk) would leave it (the event) to a single chapter, or a few paragraphs at most, and the aftermath of emotional trauma/ healing would take at the very least double to triple the time to express why it was bad, and the steps forward.
If the event takes longer than that.. that's just torture p*rn, and I better see a hell of a much longer healing time/ full entire ARCS of expressing the character's PTSD and trauma, and explaining that it was a horrible experience.

Agreed. That's the consequences part I support. I gotcha.

but then again.. there's some freakin psycho sickos out there that think bloodplay, and amputation is sexy???? and I'm just not into that. Gore, even in horror is one thing, but looking at it with those kinds of eyes... that's probably something worth seeing a therapist about. Yes, i'm kink shaming. IF that's your kink, whoever's reading this, bruh.. Really?

:blobrofl:
Yeah, seriously, some of those with that sort of headspace really need a renovation.

Horror and Dark Fantasy go can pretty far. Finding the right balance is something else and depends on the morals of the author. That new Wuthering Heights film coming out? Pretty spicy...( ͡◉◞ ͜ʖ◟ ͡◉)

The... the what? Okay, something I'll have to check out after sleep and work today. :blob_sweat:
 

AliceMoonvale

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I'm of the opinion like some others, to not glorify it.
I write dark fantasy and I've had my fair share of terrible situations for characters, but I never go into explicit detail.
I'm desensitized to most of the cruelty of humankind, however, that doesn't stop me from valuing morals even when others decide not to.
(mostly because I'm not that insane)

What I do is a lot of implications, letting the reader determine what happened or the characters speaking for themselves. I don't see the necessity of writing detailed torture scenes, unless I'm writing a snuff film in text format, which is grounds for me to get therapy.

For example, in one story I wrote, my MC's younger brother strayed off on his own and got caught by slavers. For being a unique species, he was tortured via experimentation by a high ranking mage he was sold to. I never wrote what exactly happened to him, readers would only get details by the MC finding him and assessing his condition.

That being said, I'm also of the opinion that people who have the capacity to write incredibly dark, unhinged and gruesome material in vivid, sickening detail without batting an eye, especially about something that could get your computer searched by the FBI or send you to the happy house, should probably seek professional help eventually and sort out those feelings. :blobrofl:
 

Emotica

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Speaking on and from your own personal experiences would be the easiest way, but if that's not possible, then researching sensitive topics thoroughly before using them in something meant as recreational or educational would be the responsible thing to do.
 

CinnaSloth

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That being said, I'm also of the opinion that people who have the capacity to write incredibly dark, unhinged and gruesome material in vivid, sickening detail without batting an eye, especially about something that could get your computer searched by the FBI or send you to the happy house, should probably seek professional help eventually and sort out those feelings. :blobrofl:
Having my own life experiences, and mental breaks, I think I'm mentally desensitized, and a bit deranged, or insensitive toward very certain topics, but I also think the difference is at least I know I am, and understand the difference, whether I care or not is another story entirely... BUT I think those that are also unhinged, and mentally unstable, or deranged, but still have the nerve to claim to be 'normal' are the real psychos.

What would be worse?
A law abiding citizen that tells you they're a murderer before doing any actual murdering?
or
A murderer who murders, but claims to be a simple law abiding citizen?

Personally, I think there's an obvious answer. :coffee: :blob_whistle_two:

:blob_evil: hi
 

Yubel

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When I write about these issues, I usually include a character who criticizes those actions. For example, when the main character’s affair with the first female lead is exposed (he is married to the second female lead), even though his marriage to the second heroine is a political one and he’s someone who has helped and always been wholeheartedly devoted to his siblings, the protagonist still gets harshly condemned and verbally torn apart by his sisters (both same mother sisters and half-sisters from the same father but different mothers).
 

CharlesEBrown

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It depends on how sensitive the topic is, how likely people are to get upset by it, and how important it is to the story...

For example
In Strange Awakening, Kelly suspects they took more damage than they realized in a fight due to serious pain. It turns out to be just the menstrual cycle.
I felt it needed to be addressed but did not need to be the focus of more than a chapter, so it got about a quarter of a chapter.

In Digital Cowboy (Digital Cowboy Dane), I obliquely deal with racism because it was a part of the historical setting the game the character is stuck in was based on - but it is rarely a point of a story arc, just something that pops up occasionally.
Generally in passages like this:
As Dane and Joshua returned to their horses, Joshua said quietly, “And that is why I need a drink before going back to the ranch.”
“Bad blood between you?”
“Bad skin. He only likes whites and Mexicans. His real hatred is for the Indians, though.”
Dane just shook his head sadly and followed Joshua to the Dry Gulch.
 

L1aei

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I'm of the opinion like some others, to not glorify it.

Excellent. Join the Light Side. :blobthumbsup:

I write dark fantasy and I've had my fair share of terrible situations for characters, but I never go into explicit detail.
I'm desensitized to most of the cruelty of humankind, however, that doesn't stop me from valuing morals even when others decide not to.
(mostly because I'm not that insane)

Well, good to know you have a limit. That's the line in the sand I was talking about in the start of this discussion.

What I do is a lot of implications, letting the reader determine what happened or the characters speaking for themselves. I don't see the necessity of writing detailed torture scenes, unless I'm writing a snuff film in text format, which is grounds for me to get therapy.

For example, in one story I wrote, my MC's younger brother strayed off on his own and got caught by slavers. For being a unique species, he was tortured via experimentation by a high ranking mage he was sold to. I never wrote what exactly happened to him, readers would only get details by the MC finding him and assessing his condition.

That's starting to sound like one of the popular solutions in managing these dark scenes; just implying what may have happened.

That being said, I'm also of the opinion that people who have the capacity to write incredibly dark, unhinged and gruesome material in vivid, sickening detail without batting an eye, especially about something that could get your computer searched by the FBI or send you to the happy house, should probably seek professional help eventually and sort out those feelings. :blobrofl:

Yeah, I agree, but they first need to either be aware or somebody notify the loony bin first. :blob_sweat:

Speaking on and from your own personal experiences would be the easiest way, but if that's not possible, then researching sensitive topics thoroughly before using them in something meant as recreational or educational would be the responsible thing to do.

Treat it as any other writing material, basically. Yeah, that would be the most responsible thing to do, but that's probably difficult to learn everything or at least enough about the topic too.

Having my own life experiences, and mental breaks, I think I'm mentally desensitized, and a bit deranged, or insensitive toward very certain topics, but I also think the difference is at least I know I am, and understand the difference, whether I care or not is another story entirely... BUT I think those that are also unhinged, and mentally unstable, or deranged, but still have the nerve to claim to be 'normal' are the real psychos.

Yeah, mental health should be checked more often by family doctors because family alone can be biased by simply stating they've always been like that; that's normal. So, yeah, I can believe they'd not know any better when everyone they've loved and trusted verifies them as normal.

What would be worse?
A law abiding citizen that tells you they're a murderer before doing any actual murdering?
or
A murderer who murders, but claims to be a simple law abiding citizen?

Personally, I think there's an obvious answer. :coffee: :blob_whistle_two:

:blob_evil: hi

Worse... I think context matters there. Check out a court case of the killing of Vincent Chin (1982). It's not how the incident itself, but the court ruling. That's insane.

Also, Hi! :blob_joy:

When I write about these issues, I usually include a character who criticizes those actions. For example, when the main character’s affair with the first female lead is exposed (he is married to the second female lead), even though his marriage to the second heroine is a political one and he’s someone who has helped and always been wholeheartedly devoted to his siblings, the protagonist still gets harshly condemned and verbally torn apart by his sisters (both same mother sisters and half-sisters from the same father but different mothers).

Oh! Kind of like the devil and angel on somebody's shoulders, deal?

It depends on how sensitive the topic is, how likely people are to get upset by it, and how important it is to the story...

Yep, context. I agree; it matters a lot.

For example
1st example.

I can understand that one and I believe you handled that one well; I know my sister never talks about it, and I prefer it stays that way. Same deal here for characters we really get into liking, a mention of their pain is one thing but getting into the details sometimes would paint a different image in our mines of them. :blob_blank:

In Digital Cowboy (Digital Cowboy Dane), I obliquely deal with racism because it was a part of the historical setting the game the character is stuck in was based on - but it is rarely a point of a story arc, just something that pops up occasionally.
Generally in passages like this:
2nd example.

Am... am I bad person for laughing at that? :sweat_smile:
 

CharlesEBrown

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I can understand that one and I believe you handled that one well; I know my sister never talks about it, and I prefer it stays that way. Same deal here for characters we really get into liking, a mention of their pain is one thing but getting into the details sometimes would paint a different image in our mines of them. :blob_blank:



Am... am I bad person for laughing at that? :sweat_smile:
If it was kind of a bitter, resigned laugh, then it means I got Joshua's "voice" right (he's very dry and sarcastic - pretty much doesn't expect people to get the joke until after he's left, partly as a survival trait). If it was a deep belly laugh, like my little brother gave when he saw video of the clubbing of harp seals when he was age three or four, then you might have some issues.
 

L1aei

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If it was kind of a bitter, resigned laugh, then it means I got Joshua's "voice" right (he's very dry and sarcastic - pretty much doesn't expect people to get the joke until after he's left, partly as a survival trait).

Yup. It's one of those sort of laughs one has when they hear somebody complains over a significant incident, but you chuckle when that sounds like a regular Tuesday. Thank God I ain't got issues that bad. :sweating_profusely:

If it was a deep belly laugh, like my little brother gave when he saw video of the clubbing of harp seals when he was age three or four, then you might have some issues.

You know, I remember playing a PC game called Warcraft II: Tides of Darkness or Warcraft II: Beyond the Dark Portal... one of those two. There is an ice map in the campaign where white-coated seals could be killed because they're identified as critters (engageable mobs) rather than doodads (background or terrain). When we were kids, we'd make similar jokes about clubbing "baby" seals in the game, but we did that because it disturbed others who overheard, looked over our shoulder, and witnessed the cute little seal noise as the ice patch turned red.

Dumb kids stuff getting a reaction out of others.

So I really hope that is in the similar vein as your little bro. :blob_sweat:
 

CharlesEBrown

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Yup. It's one of those sort of laughs one has when they hear somebody complains over a significant incident, but you chuckle when that sounds like a regular Tuesday. Thank God I ain't got issues that bad. :sweating_profusely:



You know, I remember playing a PC game called Warcraft II: Tides of Darkness or Warcraft II: Beyond the Dark Portal... one of those two. There is an ice map in the campaign where white-coated seals could be killed because they're identified as critters (engageable mobs) rather than doodads (background or terrain). When we were kids, we'd make similar jokes about clubbing "baby" seals in the game, but we did that because it disturbed others who overheard, looked over our shoulder, and witnessed the cute little seal noise as the ice patch turned red.

Dumb kids stuff getting a reaction out of others.

So I really hope that is in the similar vein as your little bro. :blob_sweat:
We were watching a video about it. He had a slight chuckle at the first time they showed it, realized nobody else was laughing and looked guilty, Stared blankly the second time they showed it, and glanced nervously around the room, but then just lost it the third time (which was a bit much = it was almost going into parody at that point, hitting the viewer over the head with the brutality just as badly as the hunters were hitting the animals).
We did change the cartoons we watched together after that... Fortunately he never got "into" the Three Stooges like I had at his age...
 

L1aei

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We were watching a video about it. He had a slight chuckle at the first time they showed it, realized nobody else was laughing and looked guilty, Stared blankly the second time they showed it, and glanced nervously around the room, but then just lost it the third time (which was a bit much = it was almost going into parody at that point, hitting the viewer over the head with the brutality just as badly as the hunters were hitting the animals).
We did change the cartoons we watched together after that... Fortunately he never got "into" the Three Stooges like I had at his age...

Hum... okay. I think I see what happened there. I'm not entirely gonna blame the media he watched because even I enjoyed cartoons where human-behaving animals had explosive cigars paint their faces with soot as a result, but I never stuck firecrackers up any frog's butt. So, yeah, I'd say something was going on there. :blob_blank:
 

CinnaSloth

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Worse... I think context matters there. Check out a court case of the killing of Vincent Chin (1982). It's not how the incident itself, but the court ruling. That's insane.
THAT is insane. NO jailtime for either guy?? Just a slap on the wrist, and off you go? Serious? That judge would have been thrown under a bus today. Racist judge.
Though, Chin estate being allowed to sue for interest and other charges EVERY 10 years is hilarious. $4,683,653.89 total In my opinion isn't enough. Screw those two guys, the judge, and their entire lineages.
 

L1aei

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THAT is insane. NO jailtime for either guy?? Just a slap on the wrist, and off you go? Serious? That judge would have been thrown under a bus today. Racist judge.
Though, Chin estate being allowed to sue for interest and other charges EVERY 10 years is hilarious. $4,683,653.89 total In my opinion isn't enough. Screw those two guys, the judge, and their entire lineages.

You can't see it, but I'm nodding my head like...
 

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That's a pretty grounded approach. You got my support. I'm happy to hear you are aware of the consequences of those experiences and they're conveyed through your writing by that Occam's principle; keeping it simple that doing this results in that formula. Keep it up! :blobthumbsup:



Discovered this on this forum's rules.

View attachment 46079

But then I came across the main site's rules, and I feel like they are conflicting with each other. Am I misreading something here? :blob_unsure:

View attachment 46080
Perhaps the rules for posting links in the forum are stricter than for posting links on the main site that are related to the work or the author's website, which would make some sense.

I don't know if it's planned that users, for example, can make external uncensored versions, but I think it's a positive thing to allow it as a way of keeping the site's rules intact while also promoting freedom of expression.
 

L1aei

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Perhaps the rules for posting links in the forum are stricter than for posting links on the main site that are related to the work or the author's website, which would make some sense.

I don't know if it's planned that users, for example, can make external uncensored versions, but I think it's a positive thing to allow it as a way of keeping the site's rules intact while also promoting freedom of expression.

Yeah, we're on the same page there; no idea, but it would make sense.
 

L1aei

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Okay, so here's my take as someone who's read a lot of stories and helped writers figure out this exact tightrope walk:
1. Ask yourself, "Whose pain am I centering?"

Bullseye question, there. :blobthumbsup:

If the scene lingers on the perpetrator's experience, their thrill, their detailed actions, and their "cool" moment, that's a red flag. If it stays with the victim's experience, the aftermath, and the healing or lack thereof, you're probably on solid ground. Basically: whose story is this moment serving?

Yeah, you're not showing us what goes bump in the night, you've got the headlights on where we can emotionally park.

2. Fade to black isn't cowardly.
Some writers feel like fading out is "cheating." No. It's trusting your reader. You can have a character walk into a room, close the door, and the next scene is them staring at a wall at 3am. We know. We don't need to be in the room. That gap? That's where the real horror lives.

Like a thrill ride. We know what we're in for, and experiencing the tension before the scare is the best; horror lives in implication and the trauma in their aftermaths. That's a pretty popular piece of advice.

3. Consequences don't have to be lessons learned.
Real life doesn't wrap up trauma in a neat bow. Sometimes the consequence is just... the weight a character carries forever. Or how it changes their relationships. Or how they flinch at certain sounds now. That is the consequence. You don't need a villain getting arrested for it to "count."

Exactly! Everybody is different and, even then, the environment or conditions, whatever the context, isn't a cookie sheet where everything can be neatly organized in a row.

4. The vomit test for detail.
Here's a gut check I use: if you're writing a scene and you're getting a little too into the gritty sensory details, like, you're describing it with the same loving attention you'd give a sunset, step back. Ask yourself: is this detail necessary for the story, or is it just... there? Necessary detail feels heavy. Gratuitous detail feels juicy, if that makes sense.

Crude, but crafty; me likey and others have said the same. Like, I don't know if you read the scene in this thread here, but there is one involving extracting molars and the experience is conveyed from the character on the receiving end. I liked that scene and your advice supports it.

5. Content warnings aren't spoilers.
They're just a heads-up. Like telling a friend, "Hey, this coffee's hot," before they burn their tongue. You're not ruining the surprise; you're being decent. Slap 'em on there and stop worrying about it.

Much appreciated. Yes, it's a courtesy. It shouldn't spoil anything unless the warning itself describes the whole chapter word-for-word. :sweat_smile:

6. If you're unsure, run it by someone you trust.
Sometimes we're too close to our own work to see if a scene reads as exploitative. A fresh set of eyes, especially a beta reader who's okay with dark stuff, can go, "Hey, this part feels icky" or "This part works because of X." That feedback is gold.

Like an ego check. I actually did exactly that with this thread with @Eldoria before posting it because, as you saw how many times I mentioned being concerned about this topic, I was wary to bring up this topic.

Honestly? The fact that you're sweating this means you're probably not the writer who's going to screw it up. The ones who screw it up are the ones who never stop to ask.
You're doing fine. Write your dark story. Just keep checking in with yourself like this.

Thank you very much. You're basically saying unexamined framing of the scene is the biggest risk of stepping too far over the line. Pretty cool. :blob_shade:
 
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