How to write a vulnerable moment without it seeming cliche or mushy?How to deal with cliche dialogue?How do I make the downfall of a character moving without being cliche?How do you write a story about a team?Dystopia that isn't clicheHow do I make my character be a part of something without it seeming forced?How would we write a misogynistic character without offending people?How can I write a panicked scene without it feeling like it was written in haste?How can I portray a resentful character without making them overtly angry?How can one write good dialogue in a story without sounding wooden?

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How to write a vulnerable moment without it seeming cliche or mushy?


How to deal with cliche dialogue?How do I make the downfall of a character moving without being cliche?How do you write a story about a team?Dystopia that isn't clicheHow do I make my character be a part of something without it seeming forced?How would we write a misogynistic character without offending people?How can I write a panicked scene without it feeling like it was written in haste?How can I portray a resentful character without making them overtly angry?How can one write good dialogue in a story without sounding wooden?






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15

















So, I have a kinda loudmouthed character who's always the first to fight and first to go on the offensive (This is a fantasy, so she fights a lot.) But, later in the story, she comes across someone she truly fears, and finds that she must fight that person in order to free the townspeople of an oppressive ruler.



Thing is, I want her to have a moment when she's weeping on her bed, and the MC/her love interest comes to comfort her. Then again, I don't want (insert group here) screaming in criticism and tearing that scene apart.



My question is: How do I show her vulnerability, and have a comforting moment, and tease the romance, without being overly cliche or overboard?










share|improve this question























  • 1





    Does your narrative structure allow for an imperfect narrator? Assuming she is the narrator you might avoid cliché by having the dialog clearly being him comforting her but the description of the dialog make it seem like she is comforting him.

    – Myles
    May 30 at 15:09


















15

















So, I have a kinda loudmouthed character who's always the first to fight and first to go on the offensive (This is a fantasy, so she fights a lot.) But, later in the story, she comes across someone she truly fears, and finds that she must fight that person in order to free the townspeople of an oppressive ruler.



Thing is, I want her to have a moment when she's weeping on her bed, and the MC/her love interest comes to comfort her. Then again, I don't want (insert group here) screaming in criticism and tearing that scene apart.



My question is: How do I show her vulnerability, and have a comforting moment, and tease the romance, without being overly cliche or overboard?










share|improve this question























  • 1





    Does your narrative structure allow for an imperfect narrator? Assuming she is the narrator you might avoid cliché by having the dialog clearly being him comforting her but the description of the dialog make it seem like she is comforting him.

    – Myles
    May 30 at 15:09














15












15








15


5






So, I have a kinda loudmouthed character who's always the first to fight and first to go on the offensive (This is a fantasy, so she fights a lot.) But, later in the story, she comes across someone she truly fears, and finds that she must fight that person in order to free the townspeople of an oppressive ruler.



Thing is, I want her to have a moment when she's weeping on her bed, and the MC/her love interest comes to comfort her. Then again, I don't want (insert group here) screaming in criticism and tearing that scene apart.



My question is: How do I show her vulnerability, and have a comforting moment, and tease the romance, without being overly cliche or overboard?










share|improve this question

















So, I have a kinda loudmouthed character who's always the first to fight and first to go on the offensive (This is a fantasy, so she fights a lot.) But, later in the story, she comes across someone she truly fears, and finds that she must fight that person in order to free the townspeople of an oppressive ruler.



Thing is, I want her to have a moment when she's weeping on her bed, and the MC/her love interest comes to comfort her. Then again, I don't want (insert group here) screaming in criticism and tearing that scene apart.



My question is: How do I show her vulnerability, and have a comforting moment, and tease the romance, without being overly cliche or overboard?







creative-writing characters emotions relationships






share|improve this question
















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 29 at 21:30









Cyn

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asked May 29 at 18:15









Kale SladeKale Slade

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  • 1





    Does your narrative structure allow for an imperfect narrator? Assuming she is the narrator you might avoid cliché by having the dialog clearly being him comforting her but the description of the dialog make it seem like she is comforting him.

    – Myles
    May 30 at 15:09













  • 1





    Does your narrative structure allow for an imperfect narrator? Assuming she is the narrator you might avoid cliché by having the dialog clearly being him comforting her but the description of the dialog make it seem like she is comforting him.

    – Myles
    May 30 at 15:09








1




1





Does your narrative structure allow for an imperfect narrator? Assuming she is the narrator you might avoid cliché by having the dialog clearly being him comforting her but the description of the dialog make it seem like she is comforting him.

– Myles
May 30 at 15:09






Does your narrative structure allow for an imperfect narrator? Assuming she is the narrator you might avoid cliché by having the dialog clearly being him comforting her but the description of the dialog make it seem like she is comforting him.

– Myles
May 30 at 15:09











4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















20


















There is a trick for this in The Emotional Craft of Fiction.



It's called 'me centered narration.'



Essentially, you have the character express at length in narrative (protest too much) what she wants everyone to think about her, in this case the opposite attribute of what she is actually feeling.




He came into my room and I quickly wiped my eyes, before he could see my tears.
I refused to show any vulnerability, I was nothing like the girls in town, who constantly needed help for the least little thing. That wasn't me.



"What's wrong" he asked gently.



"Nothing." I busied myself about the room, not looking at him, afraid
that doing so would lead me to another melt down. Where had that come
from? I wasn't a frail little girl who needed saving. I'd saved myself
long ago--knew plenty well how to stay ahead of trouble.



...etc...



"All right," he said at last, "I'm glad you're okay."



He made to leave, and I said, "No, wait."




Of course if you did something like this it'd be in your style, which this isn't. I think what it might do for your case is to keep the screaming hordes from saying your girl character is acting out of character. Instead, the scene serves to deepen her character and show that she has inner conflict.






share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    +1 never heard of this. I've been struggling to write the inverse scene (hero comes to apologize, ends up talking only about himself).

    – wetcircuit
    May 29 at 19:31






  • 5





    Works in third person too.

    – Galastel
    May 29 at 19:41


















4


















Switch the bravery. For this scene, her love interest is the brave one. As always, create a conflict between them. First draft of a long example:




Marcie heard something, a gasp, and moved to the back of the house. She heard it again, from Lexi's room, and moved to the door. Crying. Muffled crying. It sounded like Lexi. Was she crying? She thought she should walk away, respect her privacy, but the thought of Lexi actually crying was too much. She opened the door and walked in.



Lexi jumped, wiping her eyes. "Get out. Get out of here!"



"You're crying. What happened?"



Lexi wouldn't meet her eyes, she turned her head to the side. "Nothing."



"No, something." Marcie took a slow step toward her.



Lexi stood and faced her, eyes red, then strode to meet her. She raised her voice. "I said, get out!"



Her fists were clenched. She was angry. Marcie felt herself flush, she almost turned and ran, but stood her ground. Her knees felt weak. Her voice trembled. "I won't. You don't cry. So something's really wrong, Lexi. Tell me what's wrong."



Lexi's expression changed, from anger to ... is it sorrow?



"I'm sorry," Lexi said. "I shouldn't scare you." She turned back and sat on the bed, then fell face first into the pillow. She didn't say anything else.



Marcie hesitated, then moved to sit on the bed beside her, and put her hand on Lexi's shoulder, which made Lexi twitch. "Tell me."



Lexi's voice was muffled through the pillow. "I'm afraid. I have to fight Petrovski, and I think he might kill me."



Petrovski. Holy shit. "Wow. That's a really good reason."



Marcie was silent, thinking. Lexi sat up, and looked at her, half amused. "You think so?"



Marcie's hand had fallen to her lap. "Well. I would cry."



Lexi sniffed. "You cry if you spill coffee on yourself."



"Coffee stains, and that was my favorite dress!"



Lexi nodded, and leaned left to gently bump into Marcie, then looked away toward the window. "I know. What do you do when you're afraid?"




Then, however her love interest comforts her, proceed.






share|improve this answer

































    0


















    I think it depends on the build up whether it seems fake. The character shouldn't just jump to tears. They should go through the whole grief cycle. This should happen even maybe in the span of a single conversation to show how upset she is.



    She should seem put off but hopeful she can change it or something isn't real. Then she should be stand offish but depressed as she comes to understand something isn't working out or isn't changing. Then she should be angry at the world or something in particular, potentially irrationally angry even at the person that eventually comforts her. How could he understand what she is going through?! Then finally she should break and the tears should flow. As the tears flow, despite being attacked, he pulls her close to his chest. He may not understand what she is angry about, but he understands her.



    Have some build up showing this is brewing a bit before it suddenly unravels, or do each stage longer and over several days. Just depends on how you want this scene to exactly play out.






    share|improve this answer

































      -1


















      I always search for words that would convey or express the characters emotion when the character is in an emotional state. For example, if I have a sad, crying character but I don't want the typical "sad, crying" character to be depicted, then I search for words such as: sad, crying and I look at the synonyms to those words- and for sad, I would use despondent EX: She was in a despondent state causing a few tears to slip from her eyes," or something like that.






      share|improve this answer





















      • 2





        Can you expand on this a bit? How does this help you avoid being cliché or mushy?

        – Meg
        May 30 at 15:27












      Your Answer








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      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes








      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      20


















      There is a trick for this in The Emotional Craft of Fiction.



      It's called 'me centered narration.'



      Essentially, you have the character express at length in narrative (protest too much) what she wants everyone to think about her, in this case the opposite attribute of what she is actually feeling.




      He came into my room and I quickly wiped my eyes, before he could see my tears.
      I refused to show any vulnerability, I was nothing like the girls in town, who constantly needed help for the least little thing. That wasn't me.



      "What's wrong" he asked gently.



      "Nothing." I busied myself about the room, not looking at him, afraid
      that doing so would lead me to another melt down. Where had that come
      from? I wasn't a frail little girl who needed saving. I'd saved myself
      long ago--knew plenty well how to stay ahead of trouble.



      ...etc...



      "All right," he said at last, "I'm glad you're okay."



      He made to leave, and I said, "No, wait."




      Of course if you did something like this it'd be in your style, which this isn't. I think what it might do for your case is to keep the screaming hordes from saying your girl character is acting out of character. Instead, the scene serves to deepen her character and show that she has inner conflict.






      share|improve this answer





















      • 2





        +1 never heard of this. I've been struggling to write the inverse scene (hero comes to apologize, ends up talking only about himself).

        – wetcircuit
        May 29 at 19:31






      • 5





        Works in third person too.

        – Galastel
        May 29 at 19:41















      20


















      There is a trick for this in The Emotional Craft of Fiction.



      It's called 'me centered narration.'



      Essentially, you have the character express at length in narrative (protest too much) what she wants everyone to think about her, in this case the opposite attribute of what she is actually feeling.




      He came into my room and I quickly wiped my eyes, before he could see my tears.
      I refused to show any vulnerability, I was nothing like the girls in town, who constantly needed help for the least little thing. That wasn't me.



      "What's wrong" he asked gently.



      "Nothing." I busied myself about the room, not looking at him, afraid
      that doing so would lead me to another melt down. Where had that come
      from? I wasn't a frail little girl who needed saving. I'd saved myself
      long ago--knew plenty well how to stay ahead of trouble.



      ...etc...



      "All right," he said at last, "I'm glad you're okay."



      He made to leave, and I said, "No, wait."




      Of course if you did something like this it'd be in your style, which this isn't. I think what it might do for your case is to keep the screaming hordes from saying your girl character is acting out of character. Instead, the scene serves to deepen her character and show that she has inner conflict.






      share|improve this answer





















      • 2





        +1 never heard of this. I've been struggling to write the inverse scene (hero comes to apologize, ends up talking only about himself).

        – wetcircuit
        May 29 at 19:31






      • 5





        Works in third person too.

        – Galastel
        May 29 at 19:41













      20














      20










      20









      There is a trick for this in The Emotional Craft of Fiction.



      It's called 'me centered narration.'



      Essentially, you have the character express at length in narrative (protest too much) what she wants everyone to think about her, in this case the opposite attribute of what she is actually feeling.




      He came into my room and I quickly wiped my eyes, before he could see my tears.
      I refused to show any vulnerability, I was nothing like the girls in town, who constantly needed help for the least little thing. That wasn't me.



      "What's wrong" he asked gently.



      "Nothing." I busied myself about the room, not looking at him, afraid
      that doing so would lead me to another melt down. Where had that come
      from? I wasn't a frail little girl who needed saving. I'd saved myself
      long ago--knew plenty well how to stay ahead of trouble.



      ...etc...



      "All right," he said at last, "I'm glad you're okay."



      He made to leave, and I said, "No, wait."




      Of course if you did something like this it'd be in your style, which this isn't. I think what it might do for your case is to keep the screaming hordes from saying your girl character is acting out of character. Instead, the scene serves to deepen her character and show that she has inner conflict.






      share|improve this answer














      There is a trick for this in The Emotional Craft of Fiction.



      It's called 'me centered narration.'



      Essentially, you have the character express at length in narrative (protest too much) what she wants everyone to think about her, in this case the opposite attribute of what she is actually feeling.




      He came into my room and I quickly wiped my eyes, before he could see my tears.
      I refused to show any vulnerability, I was nothing like the girls in town, who constantly needed help for the least little thing. That wasn't me.



      "What's wrong" he asked gently.



      "Nothing." I busied myself about the room, not looking at him, afraid
      that doing so would lead me to another melt down. Where had that come
      from? I wasn't a frail little girl who needed saving. I'd saved myself
      long ago--knew plenty well how to stay ahead of trouble.



      ...etc...



      "All right," he said at last, "I'm glad you're okay."



      He made to leave, and I said, "No, wait."




      Of course if you did something like this it'd be in your style, which this isn't. I think what it might do for your case is to keep the screaming hordes from saying your girl character is acting out of character. Instead, the scene serves to deepen her character and show that she has inner conflict.







      share|improve this answer













      share|improve this answer




      share|improve this answer










      answered May 29 at 19:02









      DPTDPT

      20.1k2 gold badges40 silver badges108 bronze badges




      20.1k2 gold badges40 silver badges108 bronze badges










      • 2





        +1 never heard of this. I've been struggling to write the inverse scene (hero comes to apologize, ends up talking only about himself).

        – wetcircuit
        May 29 at 19:31






      • 5





        Works in third person too.

        – Galastel
        May 29 at 19:41












      • 2





        +1 never heard of this. I've been struggling to write the inverse scene (hero comes to apologize, ends up talking only about himself).

        – wetcircuit
        May 29 at 19:31






      • 5





        Works in third person too.

        – Galastel
        May 29 at 19:41







      2




      2





      +1 never heard of this. I've been struggling to write the inverse scene (hero comes to apologize, ends up talking only about himself).

      – wetcircuit
      May 29 at 19:31





      +1 never heard of this. I've been struggling to write the inverse scene (hero comes to apologize, ends up talking only about himself).

      – wetcircuit
      May 29 at 19:31




      5




      5





      Works in third person too.

      – Galastel
      May 29 at 19:41





      Works in third person too.

      – Galastel
      May 29 at 19:41













      4


















      Switch the bravery. For this scene, her love interest is the brave one. As always, create a conflict between them. First draft of a long example:




      Marcie heard something, a gasp, and moved to the back of the house. She heard it again, from Lexi's room, and moved to the door. Crying. Muffled crying. It sounded like Lexi. Was she crying? She thought she should walk away, respect her privacy, but the thought of Lexi actually crying was too much. She opened the door and walked in.



      Lexi jumped, wiping her eyes. "Get out. Get out of here!"



      "You're crying. What happened?"



      Lexi wouldn't meet her eyes, she turned her head to the side. "Nothing."



      "No, something." Marcie took a slow step toward her.



      Lexi stood and faced her, eyes red, then strode to meet her. She raised her voice. "I said, get out!"



      Her fists were clenched. She was angry. Marcie felt herself flush, she almost turned and ran, but stood her ground. Her knees felt weak. Her voice trembled. "I won't. You don't cry. So something's really wrong, Lexi. Tell me what's wrong."



      Lexi's expression changed, from anger to ... is it sorrow?



      "I'm sorry," Lexi said. "I shouldn't scare you." She turned back and sat on the bed, then fell face first into the pillow. She didn't say anything else.



      Marcie hesitated, then moved to sit on the bed beside her, and put her hand on Lexi's shoulder, which made Lexi twitch. "Tell me."



      Lexi's voice was muffled through the pillow. "I'm afraid. I have to fight Petrovski, and I think he might kill me."



      Petrovski. Holy shit. "Wow. That's a really good reason."



      Marcie was silent, thinking. Lexi sat up, and looked at her, half amused. "You think so?"



      Marcie's hand had fallen to her lap. "Well. I would cry."



      Lexi sniffed. "You cry if you spill coffee on yourself."



      "Coffee stains, and that was my favorite dress!"



      Lexi nodded, and leaned left to gently bump into Marcie, then looked away toward the window. "I know. What do you do when you're afraid?"




      Then, however her love interest comforts her, proceed.






      share|improve this answer






























        4


















        Switch the bravery. For this scene, her love interest is the brave one. As always, create a conflict between them. First draft of a long example:




        Marcie heard something, a gasp, and moved to the back of the house. She heard it again, from Lexi's room, and moved to the door. Crying. Muffled crying. It sounded like Lexi. Was she crying? She thought she should walk away, respect her privacy, but the thought of Lexi actually crying was too much. She opened the door and walked in.



        Lexi jumped, wiping her eyes. "Get out. Get out of here!"



        "You're crying. What happened?"



        Lexi wouldn't meet her eyes, she turned her head to the side. "Nothing."



        "No, something." Marcie took a slow step toward her.



        Lexi stood and faced her, eyes red, then strode to meet her. She raised her voice. "I said, get out!"



        Her fists were clenched. She was angry. Marcie felt herself flush, she almost turned and ran, but stood her ground. Her knees felt weak. Her voice trembled. "I won't. You don't cry. So something's really wrong, Lexi. Tell me what's wrong."



        Lexi's expression changed, from anger to ... is it sorrow?



        "I'm sorry," Lexi said. "I shouldn't scare you." She turned back and sat on the bed, then fell face first into the pillow. She didn't say anything else.



        Marcie hesitated, then moved to sit on the bed beside her, and put her hand on Lexi's shoulder, which made Lexi twitch. "Tell me."



        Lexi's voice was muffled through the pillow. "I'm afraid. I have to fight Petrovski, and I think he might kill me."



        Petrovski. Holy shit. "Wow. That's a really good reason."



        Marcie was silent, thinking. Lexi sat up, and looked at her, half amused. "You think so?"



        Marcie's hand had fallen to her lap. "Well. I would cry."



        Lexi sniffed. "You cry if you spill coffee on yourself."



        "Coffee stains, and that was my favorite dress!"



        Lexi nodded, and leaned left to gently bump into Marcie, then looked away toward the window. "I know. What do you do when you're afraid?"




        Then, however her love interest comforts her, proceed.






        share|improve this answer




























          4














          4










          4









          Switch the bravery. For this scene, her love interest is the brave one. As always, create a conflict between them. First draft of a long example:




          Marcie heard something, a gasp, and moved to the back of the house. She heard it again, from Lexi's room, and moved to the door. Crying. Muffled crying. It sounded like Lexi. Was she crying? She thought she should walk away, respect her privacy, but the thought of Lexi actually crying was too much. She opened the door and walked in.



          Lexi jumped, wiping her eyes. "Get out. Get out of here!"



          "You're crying. What happened?"



          Lexi wouldn't meet her eyes, she turned her head to the side. "Nothing."



          "No, something." Marcie took a slow step toward her.



          Lexi stood and faced her, eyes red, then strode to meet her. She raised her voice. "I said, get out!"



          Her fists were clenched. She was angry. Marcie felt herself flush, she almost turned and ran, but stood her ground. Her knees felt weak. Her voice trembled. "I won't. You don't cry. So something's really wrong, Lexi. Tell me what's wrong."



          Lexi's expression changed, from anger to ... is it sorrow?



          "I'm sorry," Lexi said. "I shouldn't scare you." She turned back and sat on the bed, then fell face first into the pillow. She didn't say anything else.



          Marcie hesitated, then moved to sit on the bed beside her, and put her hand on Lexi's shoulder, which made Lexi twitch. "Tell me."



          Lexi's voice was muffled through the pillow. "I'm afraid. I have to fight Petrovski, and I think he might kill me."



          Petrovski. Holy shit. "Wow. That's a really good reason."



          Marcie was silent, thinking. Lexi sat up, and looked at her, half amused. "You think so?"



          Marcie's hand had fallen to her lap. "Well. I would cry."



          Lexi sniffed. "You cry if you spill coffee on yourself."



          "Coffee stains, and that was my favorite dress!"



          Lexi nodded, and leaned left to gently bump into Marcie, then looked away toward the window. "I know. What do you do when you're afraid?"




          Then, however her love interest comforts her, proceed.






          share|improve this answer














          Switch the bravery. For this scene, her love interest is the brave one. As always, create a conflict between them. First draft of a long example:




          Marcie heard something, a gasp, and moved to the back of the house. She heard it again, from Lexi's room, and moved to the door. Crying. Muffled crying. It sounded like Lexi. Was she crying? She thought she should walk away, respect her privacy, but the thought of Lexi actually crying was too much. She opened the door and walked in.



          Lexi jumped, wiping her eyes. "Get out. Get out of here!"



          "You're crying. What happened?"



          Lexi wouldn't meet her eyes, she turned her head to the side. "Nothing."



          "No, something." Marcie took a slow step toward her.



          Lexi stood and faced her, eyes red, then strode to meet her. She raised her voice. "I said, get out!"



          Her fists were clenched. She was angry. Marcie felt herself flush, she almost turned and ran, but stood her ground. Her knees felt weak. Her voice trembled. "I won't. You don't cry. So something's really wrong, Lexi. Tell me what's wrong."



          Lexi's expression changed, from anger to ... is it sorrow?



          "I'm sorry," Lexi said. "I shouldn't scare you." She turned back and sat on the bed, then fell face first into the pillow. She didn't say anything else.



          Marcie hesitated, then moved to sit on the bed beside her, and put her hand on Lexi's shoulder, which made Lexi twitch. "Tell me."



          Lexi's voice was muffled through the pillow. "I'm afraid. I have to fight Petrovski, and I think he might kill me."



          Petrovski. Holy shit. "Wow. That's a really good reason."



          Marcie was silent, thinking. Lexi sat up, and looked at her, half amused. "You think so?"



          Marcie's hand had fallen to her lap. "Well. I would cry."



          Lexi sniffed. "You cry if you spill coffee on yourself."



          "Coffee stains, and that was my favorite dress!"



          Lexi nodded, and leaned left to gently bump into Marcie, then looked away toward the window. "I know. What do you do when you're afraid?"




          Then, however her love interest comforts her, proceed.







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          answered May 29 at 20:25









          AmadeusAmadeus

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          78.8k7 gold badges105 silver badges259 bronze badges
























              0


















              I think it depends on the build up whether it seems fake. The character shouldn't just jump to tears. They should go through the whole grief cycle. This should happen even maybe in the span of a single conversation to show how upset she is.



              She should seem put off but hopeful she can change it or something isn't real. Then she should be stand offish but depressed as she comes to understand something isn't working out or isn't changing. Then she should be angry at the world or something in particular, potentially irrationally angry even at the person that eventually comforts her. How could he understand what she is going through?! Then finally she should break and the tears should flow. As the tears flow, despite being attacked, he pulls her close to his chest. He may not understand what she is angry about, but he understands her.



              Have some build up showing this is brewing a bit before it suddenly unravels, or do each stage longer and over several days. Just depends on how you want this scene to exactly play out.






              share|improve this answer






























                0


















                I think it depends on the build up whether it seems fake. The character shouldn't just jump to tears. They should go through the whole grief cycle. This should happen even maybe in the span of a single conversation to show how upset she is.



                She should seem put off but hopeful she can change it or something isn't real. Then she should be stand offish but depressed as she comes to understand something isn't working out or isn't changing. Then she should be angry at the world or something in particular, potentially irrationally angry even at the person that eventually comforts her. How could he understand what she is going through?! Then finally she should break and the tears should flow. As the tears flow, despite being attacked, he pulls her close to his chest. He may not understand what she is angry about, but he understands her.



                Have some build up showing this is brewing a bit before it suddenly unravels, or do each stage longer and over several days. Just depends on how you want this scene to exactly play out.






                share|improve this answer




























                  0














                  0










                  0









                  I think it depends on the build up whether it seems fake. The character shouldn't just jump to tears. They should go through the whole grief cycle. This should happen even maybe in the span of a single conversation to show how upset she is.



                  She should seem put off but hopeful she can change it or something isn't real. Then she should be stand offish but depressed as she comes to understand something isn't working out or isn't changing. Then she should be angry at the world or something in particular, potentially irrationally angry even at the person that eventually comforts her. How could he understand what she is going through?! Then finally she should break and the tears should flow. As the tears flow, despite being attacked, he pulls her close to his chest. He may not understand what she is angry about, but he understands her.



                  Have some build up showing this is brewing a bit before it suddenly unravels, or do each stage longer and over several days. Just depends on how you want this scene to exactly play out.






                  share|improve this answer














                  I think it depends on the build up whether it seems fake. The character shouldn't just jump to tears. They should go through the whole grief cycle. This should happen even maybe in the span of a single conversation to show how upset she is.



                  She should seem put off but hopeful she can change it or something isn't real. Then she should be stand offish but depressed as she comes to understand something isn't working out or isn't changing. Then she should be angry at the world or something in particular, potentially irrationally angry even at the person that eventually comforts her. How could he understand what she is going through?! Then finally she should break and the tears should flow. As the tears flow, despite being attacked, he pulls her close to his chest. He may not understand what she is angry about, but he understands her.



                  Have some build up showing this is brewing a bit before it suddenly unravels, or do each stage longer and over several days. Just depends on how you want this scene to exactly play out.







                  share|improve this answer













                  share|improve this answer




                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Jun 3 at 19:00









                  user2927848user2927848

                  1111 bronze badge




                  1111 bronze badge
























                      -1


















                      I always search for words that would convey or express the characters emotion when the character is in an emotional state. For example, if I have a sad, crying character but I don't want the typical "sad, crying" character to be depicted, then I search for words such as: sad, crying and I look at the synonyms to those words- and for sad, I would use despondent EX: She was in a despondent state causing a few tears to slip from her eyes," or something like that.






                      share|improve this answer





















                      • 2





                        Can you expand on this a bit? How does this help you avoid being cliché or mushy?

                        – Meg
                        May 30 at 15:27















                      -1


















                      I always search for words that would convey or express the characters emotion when the character is in an emotional state. For example, if I have a sad, crying character but I don't want the typical "sad, crying" character to be depicted, then I search for words such as: sad, crying and I look at the synonyms to those words- and for sad, I would use despondent EX: She was in a despondent state causing a few tears to slip from her eyes," or something like that.






                      share|improve this answer





















                      • 2





                        Can you expand on this a bit? How does this help you avoid being cliché or mushy?

                        – Meg
                        May 30 at 15:27













                      -1














                      -1










                      -1









                      I always search for words that would convey or express the characters emotion when the character is in an emotional state. For example, if I have a sad, crying character but I don't want the typical "sad, crying" character to be depicted, then I search for words such as: sad, crying and I look at the synonyms to those words- and for sad, I would use despondent EX: She was in a despondent state causing a few tears to slip from her eyes," or something like that.






                      share|improve this answer














                      I always search for words that would convey or express the characters emotion when the character is in an emotional state. For example, if I have a sad, crying character but I don't want the typical "sad, crying" character to be depicted, then I search for words such as: sad, crying and I look at the synonyms to those words- and for sad, I would use despondent EX: She was in a despondent state causing a few tears to slip from her eyes," or something like that.







                      share|improve this answer













                      share|improve this answer




                      share|improve this answer










                      answered May 29 at 18:53









                      Dawn KelliDawn Kelli

                      4723 silver badges15 bronze badges




                      4723 silver badges15 bronze badges










                      • 2





                        Can you expand on this a bit? How does this help you avoid being cliché or mushy?

                        – Meg
                        May 30 at 15:27












                      • 2





                        Can you expand on this a bit? How does this help you avoid being cliché or mushy?

                        – Meg
                        May 30 at 15:27







                      2




                      2





                      Can you expand on this a bit? How does this help you avoid being cliché or mushy?

                      – Meg
                      May 30 at 15:27





                      Can you expand on this a bit? How does this help you avoid being cliché or mushy?

                      – Meg
                      May 30 at 15:27


















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