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Topic : Re: How can I create deep personal stakes? Note: This question deals exclusively with personal stakes (what the character could lose). It does not deal with public stakes (what the world of the - selfpublishingguru.com

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If you like process and planning, The Story Grid is really good.

You start out with an overview of your story on a foolscap sheet and, from there, make a detailed outline scene by scene analysing the stakes for each scene, giving it a rating in terms of its severity, and whether it shifts from positive to negative, negative to positive and so on. It enables you to see, at a glance, whether your stakes are getting progressively worse for your protagonist as the story evolves. Which they should. And is probably why you’re only finding examples of basic stakes that are then raised as the story progresses.

If you think about The Lord of the Rings in terms of Frodo’s stakes, remember, it doesn’t start out as deep and personal as you discuss. In the beginning, when Frodo is given the ring, all he has to do is keep it safe, and keep it secret. The ring has no hold over him at the beginning. Those stakes increase in intensity when Gandalf tells Frodo that he must leave the Shire and get to The Prancing Pony where Gandalf will meet him. But still, the stakes are not that high and the ring has very little hold. But again, those stakes worsen when Gandalf doesn’t make it to The Prancing Pony and the Black Riders attack the inn. With the attack on Wethertop, the ring finally starts to take hold, and Frodo nearly dies. But, still, his only goal, at that point, is to get the ring to Rivendell. If you analyse the story, you will notice the stakes for Frodo gradually increase in severity and get more and more personal, until his untenable moment when he’s abandoned the fellowship (and even Sam) and walks into the Cracks of Doom alone, only to find the ring has complete power over him and he cannot destroy it, cannot do what he set out to do.

BUT, Tolkien didn't start there. He started with:

“In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit.”

And, from that one line, wrote The Hobbit and then The Silmarillion. Then he spent twelve years plotting TLOTR. He didn't start with Frodo standing alone at The Cracks of Doom unable to destroy the ring. He started with a map of his world and gave the story 12 years to "compost" (** see below **), saying:

"I have long ceased to invent…I wait till I seem to know what really
happened. Or till it writes itself.”

So, I would suggest that you don’t try to come up with such deep and personal stakes at the outset. Start small. Add a small complication for your protagonist. Then analyse how you can make it a little bit worse, then even worse, gradually increasing the intensity until the circumstances become untenable for your protagonist, deep and personal, life and death, death or damnation. And this will depend very much on your genre and your individual protagonist (what matters to them).

The general consensus is that you should keep listing ideas, then ask yourself how you can make things a little bit worse. The first ten or fifteen ideas you have will probably have been done already, may even be cliché (because everything you have seen and read will crowd the forefront of your mind), but as you keep mining your imagination for something better, something more intense, you will eventually list down an idea that’s original and exciting. But this process takes time. ** In Writing Down The Bones, Natalie Goldberg calls this process ‘composting’. You keep throwing in new ideas, and give them time to compost in your mind, until you arrive at beautiful rich soil. **

Read The Story Grid, listen to the podcast, and look at the website. It’s really good if you’re an obsessive planner. It’s not for everyone, but I think it might be up your street.

Good luck!


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