I'm kinda done with the way existence exist, but also just not. I am kinda stressed, but too relaxed to do anything, but too stressed to truly relax. I've just had a big fight with three now ex-friends. Which only created more problems, on top of the fact that I've never lost friends this way.
I'm done, but can't leave
Ravens can talk!đŚââŹ
Video byâPaige Bucaloâ
Go little rock star
âBut why didnât they just do that earlier!â
âYou can time travel â so time travel!â
âDoesnât X have Y spell? Why arenât they using it to escape?â
âYou. Have. Telekinesis! How are you this stupid?â
Plot holes! The bane of every writerâs existence. You think youâve polished your beautiful manuscript, you have it all sent out for the masses to consume and praise and shower with compliments and adoration⌠and then they start tugging at a thread that may or may not begin to unravel your entire story. Youâve read this thing top to bottom, forwards and backwards and upside down, so many times the letters are burned into your brain. You mumble your monologues in your sleep â how did you not see this? How do you fix this?
See this post about beginning the writing process that might help you avoid opening a plot hole entirely with a solid enough script and outline.
Your magic systemâs established rules have just been broken for TeNSioN
Your Deus Ex Machina really did come out of nowhere and is quite out of character
Why doesn't Character just run away from a fight they can't win?
Characters forgetting they have superpowers, extreme intelligence, handy tools or weapons, survival skills, common sense, or crucial information to escape and/or solve a situation
Characters dying for the above mistakes when said death could have been avoided
The entire story could have been avoided had Character A just told Character B the truth
Character X should have known ___ all along given their profession/backstory/friend circle/education/personality
And variations of the above, Iâm sure Iâm missing a couple. Fixing plot holes generally come in two camps: Those you can fix by rewriting the existing manuscript that contains the hole, or those you have to work around from a previous manuscript thatâs already been published.
Plot holes happen in reality. Expecting your first, second, or 15th draft to be completely foolproof is utter nonsense. Real people forget stuff theyâre supposed to know all the time, tools that would be useful are left behind, GroupThink makes very bad decisions.
The difference is: You are writing fiction. Your goal is to be entertaining, not necessarily realistic. A character simply *forgetting* Macguffin X at the climax of the story does not make for an entertaining read, no matter how likely it might be to happen in the real world.
Youâre making this entire world up as you go and that alone is an impressive feat millions of others can only dream about â cut yourself some slack, okay? Everything is fixable.
Plot holes also happen because weâre so engrossed in our own story that we forget itâs all made up. Youâre 22 chapters into a 24 chapter novel and youâve just realized your psychic hero would never have been caught unawares like this. âBut thatâs just how he is!â
No. Stop. Thatâs not just how he is. Thatâs just how you wrote him â and you can go back and un-write him. Any excuse you can dream up you can un-write, and unfortunately, youâll likely have to do a fair bit of it if you still have the opportunity.
Plot holes generally open long after the inciting incident that causes them. If youâre going to fix it, duct-taping together a solution in that very same scene isnât the way to do it. You have to figure out why itâs a hole at all, then go back and fix its foundations.
Sometimes youâre lucky enough to stumble upon them before itâs too late. A fair bit of the time, though, your audience has to tell you. Finding your own plot holes requires stepping back from your work and looking at it like youâre just a reader, not the author.
Read your plot out loud to yourself and keep asking questions like:
Does this make sense for the scene?
Does this only exist to look cool at the cost of logic?
Are these rules I wrote too easy to break or contradictory in any way?
Is there any other way for this character to escape this situation?
Is the only solution here too contrived?
That, and having an army of beta readers who should show you flaws youâve overlooked. Even then, some things just arenât obvious at all until someone too smart for their own good points out something no one else considered before.
Itâs okay. Itâs not the end of the world.
Fix your broken magic system
A âmagic systemâ broadly describes any type of powers/abilities/supernatural entities that function in your world. They can be in high fantasy, urban fantasy, sci-fi, or any genre really. The Force is a magic system, as much as is bending in Last Airbender even if no one calls it âmagicâ.
For example: Force users are telekinetic⌠and yet donât simply repeatedly spam the âchuck my enemies into a wall/off a cliff/anywhere that is away from meâ button. Itâs what youâd call a âsoftâ magic system, it doesnât have explicit rules on how and when it can and should be used. It just *is*.
Fixing holes in your magic system first demands examining why you wrote it the way you did, why you gave it these specific rules, or why you didnât, and all the ways characters should otherwise be able to use it when your story demands they get creative.
For soft magic systems â never let the magic system win the day. It invites far too much scrutiny. Gandalf from Lord of the Rings is a Wizard. He can do an undefined number of spells and has an unclear number of abilities and limit to his reach. Gandalfâs magic is never the saving grace of the Fellowship. So asking âwhy didnât Gandalf just do Xâ isnât ever a question people have because success never depends on Gandalf doing X.
Everyone hates on the time turner in Harry Potter, as they should. Time travel is essential to the plot of Prisoner of Azkaban, without it the heroes fail. And yet, because it is time travel, why it never existed earlier and why they never use it again to solve more massive plot problems is a valid question. As goes with many spells and abilities in the series.
For hard magic systems â remember that you wrote the rules, you can go back and change them at any time before itâs published. Bending in Last Airbender is rarely the focus of any conflict. Yes, two benders will fight each other, but itâs not âwhoâs the stronger bender,â itâs âwhoâs smarter with their elementâ. Who better uses their environment? Which one is racing against a clock before reinforcements arrive and overwhelm them? Which one runs the risk of exposing themselves if they start bending? Whose mental state is crippling their bending today?
These are all character-driven explanations for why certain abilities do or donât manifest in a given scene⌠until the finale when it really is just a clash of red and blue aura lasers.
There is never a scene where a character is trapped when they shouldnât be. Never a âwhy didnât you just Xâ moment, because itâs never about the bending, itâs about the bender.
Turn plot-reasons into character-reasons
This means taking a âwhy donât they just do Xâ and making the reason because one of the protagonists is morally against doing it, not because the hand of the author demands it.
In Last Airbender, Aang is vocally against simply killing the Fire Lord. It would be easier, it would risk far less casualties and carnage, itâs fastest. And yet. Aang doesnât do it simply because heâs not strong enough or he doesnât have some magical super weapon, or the stars have aligned and now heâs lost a very convenient ability â Aang doesnât want to take the easy road because thatâs who he is as a person.
Heâs been raised as a monk to value the preservation of life above all else (ignoring any accidental casualties over the course of the series). Him being desperate to not simply kill Ozai is central to his character and even when he has the chance in the climax of the fight, he still doesnât take it.
Now âwhy didnât you do that earlierâ does, still, concern the âenergy bendingâ established out of nowhere just for the finale so Aang doesnât have to compromise his morals to win⌠but the show is so damn good and Ozaiâs just desserts so damn sweet it doesnât really matter.
Making these plot decisions character decisions, so long as they are in-character, gives some juicy potential for schisms within Team Protagonist as fan favorites clash over ideals and morals and whether or not the greater good is worth them sacrificing something so central to their being.
This also applies to characters not sharing crucial information with each other. Make them distrustful of the others, or let them attempt it anyway and have some other consequence for the effort. Anything is better than a character sitting on valuable info simply to maintain the mystery.
Avoid Deus Ex Machinas
The âsurprise reinforcement cavalry chargeâ is one of my favorite deus ex machinas in fantasy. Everybody cheers, it looks amazing, the music is swelling, our heroes on the battlefield realize they havenât been forsaken by their friends, etc. In Lord of the Rings, yes, Theoden could have arrived 30 minutes earlier and saved even more lives, but we already knew he was on his way moving as fast as he could without exhausting his horses. Theodenâs army also took care of the bulk of the battle so when Aragorn arrives with the second surprise reinforcements, itâs less a decisive blow that comes out of nowhere and more the victory lap.
In âBattle of the Bastards,â Game of Thrones has its third surprise cavalry charge of the series, only this one much more explicitly comes to save the day. The difference between this scene and Theodenâs charge is: Audiences had no idea Littlefinger was on his way, and neither did Jon Snow. Had Sansa told him she had a plan, Jon could have waited. He wasnât backed against a wall and forced to fight right then and there, he could have stalled an extra hour by just not showing up to the battlefield to wait for his cavalry. With Sansa inexplicably not telling him, she risked his life and the lives of his entire army because the hand of the writers wanted to keep it a surprise. Worst of all, when the battle is over, he compliments her decision, despite all the blood on her hands.
Surprise reinforcements, saviors, powers, and abilities always run the risk of âwhy didnât they do that earlierâ and you should be asking yourself the same question. If you canât come up with an explanation other than âbecause itâll look coolâ go back to the drawing board.
Or, have your very own characters pissed that the savior didnât just do that earlier. Have your characters ask where this special power was, have it mean something to them and the story at large. Had Jon been angry with Sansa, given their incredibly pyrrhic victory and the potentially avoidable death of their youngest brother, it mightâve made for some interesting character drama.
Give your saving graces deadly costs
âWhy didnât they just do X earlier?â
âBecause doing X would have killed Character D, dummy.â
Giving your super special magic, mutant, super, or supernatural powers costs, drawbacks, and limitations forces the characters who use them to not resort to them every single chance they get. Their magic drains their physical stamina, or the demon they made a deal with camping in their brain threatens to overtake their psyche, or the sword is cursed and every time the hero raises it in battle, they lose a little piece of themselves. Or, using this creepy power strains their relationship with their friends or community.
Without risk and consequences, you cannot avoid âwhy didnât they do that earlier,â because the only answer you have to give is âbecause I, the author, said so.â The only time a character is allowed to have selective amnesia about their superpowers is if itâs been established beforehand as a potential problem. Then itâs not âthis came out of nowhere.â Then your audience is dreading the entire time waiting for that chekhovâs gun to fire.
Donât compromise your story for sensationalism
I can complain about ~subverting expectations~ in another post, but what I mean here is this: Are you writing this scene purely for shock value, for the sake of a twist, because a story this grim demands at least one character death, or because itâs going to look epic?
In this post about pacing and this post about how to write tone, I talked about making your scenes pull double duty. You can write a scene for shock and awe, but if itâs at the expense of a characterâs integrity or intelligence, come up with another way to make it spectacular.
You want the villain to monologue to give the heroes time to save the world? Then write a villain with an ego and personality that would monologue. You want the hero to be a one-man-army? Then write their personality as the lone wolf type and have it be a flaw of theirs that they keep striking out alone, consequences be damned.
You absolutely need the hero to not take the easy road and fight the bad guy without using their most effective weapon? Give them a reason to stall this fight. Maybe they really do need to simply run out a clock, or they donât actually want to kill/subdue their opponent, or in doing so, the villainâs death is what causes the Bad Thing to happen.
If I write a character that can kill with just a look, every time I put them in a dangerous situation I need to then justify why they donât do that over and over again, unless itâs by their own stubborn integrity that they choose not to.
If I write a villainous plan so devious and well thought out, the only thing standing in the way is living protagonists? I need a reason the villain doesnât just murder the heroes every chance they get. Maybe theyâre internally struggling over actually going through with it, or their ego demands the hero doesnât get a quick or honorless death, or they do actually need a living hero for the plan to work.
All of the above is advice for issues within the same manuscript. What happens if youâve already published and have the chance to address a known plot hole in the sequel?
About the worst thing you can do is slap in a throwaway line or hasty explanation to cover your ass. Everyone reading and watching will notice. Saying nothing is better than saying that.
See the duct-tape in Rise of Skywalker when the heroes explained that they couldn't just hypersspace-jump another ship into the enemy fleet because it worked so horribly effectively last time. Doesn't matter that they could have put it on autopilot or sacrificed a droid, or that, at any point in the history of Star Wars, someone else could have and should have done this desperate maneuver. For the sake of "looking cool" it opened an entire sinkhole.
Less a âholeâ and more an inconsistency â the pegasus Blackjack in Percy Jackson is explicitly a mare, a female horse, in one book, and then inexplicably male in later books. Why? Well the author made a mistake, simple as that. He did *not* attempt to explain this error away or dig the hole deeper. It just is. Though Iâm not sure why Blackjack couldnât just stay a mare and how he didnât reference the previous book when writing the sequel is a bit baffling.
If your heroes can no longer use the Deus Ex Machina they used before â have them attempt to use it, and then come up with a solid reason why itâs not possible. Maybe it was one-time use, or the savior simply doesnât want to, or the cost/risk is too high to attempt it again, or it simply canât be found and itâs very frustrating.
Have the heroes be morally opposed to doing what they did before, or overconfident, or skeptical that it will even work again only for that choice to bite them in the ass later. Have the magic item all used up, the recipe to recreate it lost to history. Thereâs a hundred better excuses than the hand of the author simply saying so.
â
If you arenât going to write a sequel and you accept living with the plot hole unfilled⌠chances are people are going to love the story despite its flaws. Harry Potter is the poster child of âwhy didnât they use X spell to solve the problemâ or âthey have a spell for X, yet they donât have a spell for Y?â and how many people love that story?
In the end, a plot hole can be tiny or massive and chances are the story you told is entertaining enough to make up for it. Itâs just a story, itâs just fiction. Learn from your mistakes so the next piece you create is even better.
Eat the soup
Bite the phone
Silly phone, you're not detecting an analog audio accessory, you're detecting soup, from the bowl of soup I dropped you in.
Someone needs to hold their horses less more fly away
Edit: (29 April 2025) Why did I think that this was a good idea for a pun at the time like why would I post this
A tip for excellent writing I just learned: Don't introduce a character with their Dramatic Backstory. It makes readers go "oh alright this is the Dramatic Background Story Character" and establishes a baseline of Tragic, either for the story as a whole or this character in particular. With no contrast of light and dark, pure darkness isn't impactful, it just looks like the absence of anything to look at.
If you really want someone's dramatic backstory to hit the audience like a gut punch, let them get to know the character first. That way the dark backstory doesn't come off as a description of who they are, but an explanation to why they are the way they are. Bonus points for connecting it to something that's already been established as a part of the character - what a devastating blow to suddenly put together that hold on, that funny quirky thing that they always do is a fucking trauma response.
Help guys I'm so fat. Look at those thighs, they take up a lot of space. Meanspo is very welcome, as you see I need it.
I've realized that counting calories doesn't really do much for me. I just simply cannot stop eating. Does any one have any other methods, or tips for me. They're all welcome no matter how extreme.
Don't report, just block, you're not helping trust me.
Pro for me not for thee
i love to headcanon steve as this aggressively progressive dude but like, he begged to be part of the us army,,,,,, we canât just Forget That
Guys I'm far over my limit today. My limit is 1000 calories, which still is a lot. I ate around 1500 calories today. I just couldn't stop eating, I have no self discipline. Please send meanspo, I need it.
This is a very good idea, I'm saving this so I can find it later
here are the ed journaling pages i made =)
Evil scientist ??????????????????????????????? Alternative, Metalhead, Writer, Artist, Singing, Witch, Crocheting, why are we here, why do we exist???!
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