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WRITERS HELPING WRITERS®

WRITERS HELPING WRITERS®

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The Ripple Effect: How to Weave Plot with Character

Published: December 12, 2024 by LISA POISSO - Resident Writing Coach

Actions have consequences—that’s what makes a story tick. A story begins when events around a character push them into action. Those actions create new situations, and those situations push the character into even tougher choices. Watching this chain reaction unfold is what keeps readers glued to the pages.

When we call a story “entertaining,” we’re really talking about something deeper: the chance to step into someone else’s experience. We want to understand their choices and see how their decisions mirror our own journey.

We’re not reading strictly to find out what happens, but neither are we reading only to understand why. Instead, we’re fascinated by the ripple effect of how one dynamic feeds the other.

A satisfying story does two things at once. It sweeps us into an absorbing plot while simultaneously easing us into the vicarious experience of a character’s inner transformation. Plot events shape the character’s options, and their choices then create new situations—a self-perpetuating cycle of action and reaction that creates the story.

Are stories plot-based, or are they character-based? The answer is yes.
Story is the synthesis of both. Plot shapes characters, and characters drive plot. Stories draw their power from the interplay between the two.

Here’s how plot and character organically wind together in classic Western storytelling, act by act.

Act 1: Welcome to the Ordinary World

Key Concepts

Act 1: The first quarter of the story

Plot Keywords: status quo, the normal world, the ordinary world

Character Keywords: disunity, inauthenticity

The story opens on a character living in disunity and inauthenticity, although they don’t realize that yet. Something about their life is lacking, internally or externally or both.

The first act introduces the character, builds the story world and its time, place, and rules, and plants the seeds of change. This sets the chain of action and reaction that drives everything to come, creating the plot that the character will spend the rest of the story pursuing and wrestling with.

Act 1: This act is a story about how inauthenticity and disunity arrive in this character’s life.

Turning Point 1 (end of Act 1): This is how the character resolves to fix the problem created by inauthenticity or disunity.

Act 2: The Easy Way Out

Key Concepts

Act 2: The second quarter of the story from 25% to 50%; in three-act structure, this is the first half of Act 2, the part before the midpoint

Plot Keywords: reactive response, the easy way

Character Keywords: deconstruction

The character steps into this quarter of the story ready to tackle their problem, but they’re going about it all wrong. They’re reacting to their new reality without truly understanding it, chasing solutions that look promising but won’t really work. They’re still operating from old patterns and incomplete understanding.

This initial approach begins to crumble as they discover the problem runs deeper than they thought. Their responses slowly deconstruct their familiar worldview, forcing them to question what they believe about themselves and their situation.

Act 2: This act is a story about how the character reactively responds to the problem.

TP2 (end of Act 2—the midpoint): This is the moment the character realizes their reactive response isn’t working. The problem has grown more complex than they imagined, their old worldviews are deconstructing piece by piece, and they must find a new path forward.

Act 3: The Hard Road

Key Concepts

Act 3: The third quarter of the story from 50% to 75%; in three-act structure, this is the second half of Act 2, the part after the midpoint

Plot Keywords: proactive progress, the hard way

Character Keywords: reconstruction

The character enters this act with a new understanding: It’s time to stop reacting and time to start acting. They begin approaching their problem head-on, using newfound tools or information or wisdom, but success doesn’t come easily. The obstacles they face grow to match their increasing capacity.

As they make proactive progress toward their goal, they gradually reconstruct a new worldview to replace what was torn down. But this reconstruction comes at a cost—each step forward requires more from them than the last.

Act 3: This act is a story about how the character makes proactive progress toward solving their problem.

TP3 (end of Act 3): This is the moment when the character’s proactive approach seems to fail despite everything they’ve learned. Though they’ve been reconstructing a stronger sense of self, they hit what appears to be an insurmountable obstacle or dead end.

Act 4: Bringing It All Together

Key Concepts

Act 4: The final quarter of the story, from 75% to the end

Plot Keywords: final push, climax, resolution

Character Keywords: synthesis, unity, authenticity

This is where all threads converge. The character faces their goal and whatever stands in their way, and now they’re armed with something new: authenticity. The climactic breakthrough isn’t just about solving the external problem—it’s about achieving unity between who they are and who they need to be.

Act 4: This act is a story about how the character achieves synthesis, finding their authentic self and moving forward with a new sense of unity.

Climax: This is the moment when the character’s newfound authenticity or unity enables them to solve their problem in a way that would have been impossible before their transformation.

Finding Your Story’s Flow

Each story finds its own rhythm within the cycle of these four acts. Stray too far from their natural flow, though, and the story loses its power. A weak setup leaves readers adrift; without real struggle, victory rings false.

What matters isn’t following a rigid structure but creating a transformative journey. Readers come to witness your character’s evolution from disunity to unity—this is what lingers in their minds long after the final page.

LISA POISSO - Resident Writing Coach

Lisa Poisso specializes in helping new and emerging fiction writers. A veteran of the disciplined world of classical dance, she brings that same practiced artistry to writing—where structure, form, and technique are springboards that give you freedom of movement on the page. Explore her Writing & Editing Resources for valuable tools to develop your manuscript, and subscribe to the Writes of Fiction newsletter to receive Lisa’s hand-picked writing advice delivered directly to your inbox. Find out more about our RWC team here and connect with Lisa below.

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Filed Under: Characters, Plotting, Resident Writing Coach, Story Structure, Writing Craft, Writing Lessons

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Luanna Stewart says

    December 13, 2024 at 7:35 am

    Yes! Thank you!!! I’ve read so many writing craft books about storytelling and structure, but your terminology nails it for me – finally. I’ll borrow that hint about the sticky notes. Cheers!

    • Lisa Poisso says

      December 17, 2024 at 11:37 am

      What a great holiday gift. Kudos to you!

  2. Ingmar Albizu says

    December 12, 2024 at 6:46 pm

    This article was very helpful, Lisa. Thank you so much.
    The different keywords to the plot structure architecture gave me a better perspective of what to aim toward when developing my stories.

    • Lisa Poisso says

      December 17, 2024 at 11:38 am

      Thanks for reading, Ingmar. Good luck with your stories!

  3. Kay DiBianca says

    December 12, 2024 at 4:04 pm

    Very nice! I have a three-door closet in my office, and I use the doors to lay out a storyboard with post-it notes for each act of a novel. I think I’ll put a post-it note at the top of each section (Door #2 will have serve for two acts) to help keep me focused. Thanks!

    • Lisa Poisso says

      December 17, 2024 at 11:38 am

      What a great idea!

  4. Laurie says

    December 12, 2024 at 12:55 pm

    Very good post. Very instructive.

    • Lisa Poisso says

      December 12, 2024 at 1:41 pm

      Thanks, Laurie—I hope it helps everything fall into place!

      • Laurie says

        December 12, 2024 at 4:18 pm

        More than know. I loved it.

        • Laurie says

          December 12, 2024 at 4:22 pm

          Make that “More than you know. I loved it.” I need to proof what I type.

  5. BECCA PUGLISI says

    December 12, 2024 at 10:47 am

    I was going to say pretty much exactly what Angela said. The keywords really clarify what each act is for. Put them all together, and you can see how each part leads into the other for a cohesive overall structure. Thanks for sharing!

    • Lisa Poisso says

      December 12, 2024 at 1:41 pm

      I love that feeling when everything comes together, right? Thanks, Becca!

  6. ANGELA ACKERMAN says

    December 12, 2024 at 10:39 am

    This is brilliant, Lisa – it makes story structure easy to understand and I LOVE the keywords you’ve included because it really distills the purpose of each part of the story and what really needs to be shown and reinforced!

    • Lisa Poisso says

      December 12, 2024 at 1:43 pm

      I have authors who stick those keywords on Post-Its to the top of their monitor when they’re writing. It’s wild how one little word can keep both the plot and the character arc locked on target!

      • ANGELA ACKERMAN says

        December 12, 2024 at 2:48 pm

        So smart!

Trackbacks

  1. Weekend Roadside Cafe – Path To Publication says:
    January 11, 2025 at 8:13 am

    […] How To Weave Plot With Character: A very helpful writing guide! […]

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