Macha
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Alright, so you know that writing rule "show, don't tell"? There's a fancy term for the best tool to do that called the Objective Correlative.
Don't just tell me a character is sad. Show me the things that make up that sadness. Use a set of objects, a scene, or a chain of events that make readers feel the emotion without you ever naming it when they sees them.
Telling:
Showing with an Objective Correlative:
See? You used objects (the wrapped plate, the dentist card), sounds (distant laughter), and a situation (sitting alone). You didn't say "lonely," but those details makes the reader feel it directly.
This is how you use it:
1. Identify the emotion you want the reader to feel.
2. Brainstorm the "stuff" attached to that feeling.
3. Put those details together in a scene.
4. Let the reader's brain do the work of feeling the emotion.
5. If the reader has no brain or they are a sociopathic psychopath who can't feel emotion like my mom, then all of this is pointless.
Why am I writing this? Because someone said my writing reads like AI. That's like saying T.S. Eliot who popularized this in 1919 is AI. Now your writing can reads like AI too!
Hope this helps!
Don't just tell me a character is sad. Show me the things that make up that sadness. Use a set of objects, a scene, or a chain of events that make readers feel the emotion without you ever naming it when they sees them.
Telling:
"Hoshino felt lonely and forgotten."
Showing with an Objective Correlative:
"On the kitchen table, Hoshino's plate sat covered in plastic wrap. A single birthday card from his dentist leaned against the toaster. Outside, the neighbor's laughter echoed through his closed window."
See? You used objects (the wrapped plate, the dentist card), sounds (distant laughter), and a situation (sitting alone). You didn't say "lonely," but those details makes the reader feel it directly.
This is how you use it:
1. Identify the emotion you want the reader to feel.
2. Brainstorm the "stuff" attached to that feeling.
3. Put those details together in a scene.
4. Let the reader's brain do the work of feeling the emotion.
5. If the reader has no brain or they are a sociopathic psychopath who can't feel emotion like my mom, then all of this is pointless.
Why am I writing this? Because someone said my writing reads like AI. That's like saying T.S. Eliot who popularized this in 1919 is AI. Now your writing can reads like AI too!
Hope this helps!