Newer How to Write

by Lewis Faulkner | May 5, 2026 | For Writers

*️⃣ Key Takeaways

✍️ Strong novels emerge from clarity, not complexity

✍️ Structure is something you find, not force

✍️ Character decisions drive more than plot mechanics

✍️  Breakthrough moments often come late in the process

✍️  Constraints (not freedom) create the most powerful ideas

Orange tint of writer typing.

How to Write a Novel That Actually Works — Structure, Story, and Creative Process explores how writing a novel isn’t about following a perfect system. It’s about finding the one that works for your story.

Also, through the lens of Agency Focus, this post explores the choices writers make under creative and professional pressure, asking how responsibility functions when certainty is impossible.

*️⃣ Definitions

Audience

This post is written primarily for: 

→ Writers

Primary Focus

The main conceptual focus of this post is: 

→ Agency

Secondary Focus

The secondary focus of this post is:

→Systems

Systems Focus


Posts under Systems explore institutions, technologies, structures, and incentives that shape human behavior and outcomes.

Perception Focus


Posts under Perception examine interpretation, belief, bias, and the stories we tell ourselves about the world.

Agency Focus


Posts under Agency investigate choice, responsibility, autonomy, and the power to act within real constraints.

Photo of pen writing on paper with ink for blog post “✍️ How to Write a Novel That Actually Works — Structure, Story, and Creative Process” Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash

1️⃣ The Real Writing Process — It’s Not What You Think

📌 What is it?

If you expect clarity at the beginning, you’ll stall. Clarity usually comes after exploration.

🔍 Do writers actually plan everything in advance?

🎯 Not usually. Most stories begin with fragments, not full structures.

🎯 Why it matters

3–6 sentences
• Tie to:
◦ Creative Intelligence
◦ Systems / Perception / Agency

If you expect clarity at the beginning, you’ll stall. Clarity usually comes after exploration. in the module Advanced settings.

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Blended Thinking Block (Text Module)
Format inside module:
• 🧠 Insight
• 🔄 Expansion
• 🔍 Observation
• ✍️ Personal
• 🔁 Reflection

W FAULKNER'S START OF SOUND AND FURY

William Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury (1929) began taking shape as a mental image of a little girl with muddy drawers climbing a pear tree. This single visual anecdote evolved into a complex narrative as Faulkner attempted to explain who the children were and how the girl’s clothing became soiled.The Foundational ImageThe novel's genesis was not a planned plot but a "mental picture" of the Compson children in 1898.The Scene: Seven-year-old Caddy Compson climbs a blooming pear tree to peer into a window and report on her grandmother’s funeral to her three brothers waiting below.The Symbol: Her brothers, looking up from the ground, see the muddy seat of her drawers, which she had stained earlier while playing in a creek.The Evolution: Faulkner originally intended this to be a short story titled "Twilight." He found the character of Caddy so moving that he realized her story required the scope of a full novel.

Somewhere? I've written 6

the module Advanced settings.

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Real-world application or scenario

🧪 Example

You might begin with:
• A scene
• A character
• A tone
…but no clear story yet.

2–5 actionable steps

💡 How to Apply/Understand It 

Start writing before everything makes sense.

Let patterns emerge.

ONE strong sentence only

💬 Memorable Line 

"A story doesn’t begin as a structure—it ???

Text Module (Internal Links Block)

 

Text Module (Internal Links Block)
Include:
• 🔗 Pillar link (required)
• 🔗 1 related post (or placeholder)
• 🔗 Optional cross-pillar link

🔗 REAL-LIFE EXAMPLE (YOUR STYLE)

Let’s say your section is:

“Identity Is Built Through Repetition”
🔗 Internal Links Block (Proper Version)

This idea shows up across your entire creative system—not just here.

Every link must serve ONE of these functions:

🧭 1. CONTEXT (Why this idea exists here)

→ Pillar links

🔁 2. EXPANSION (Where this idea continues)

→ Sibling links

🌐 3. CONNECTION (Where ideas intersect)

→ Cross-pillar links

⚖️ STEP 3: DECISION FILTER (SHOULD YOU EVEN LINK?)

Before adding any link, ask:

1. Does this expand the idea?

If no → don’t link

2. Does this feel like a natural next thought?

If no → don’t link

3. Would the reader benefit from deeper exploration here?

If no → don’t link

👉 If you fail 2/3 → remove it

🧠 Creative Intelligence Pillar

Repetition is one of the core mechanisms behind how creative thinking becomes a structured system instead of random inspiration.
→ /creative-intelligence-pillar

🔁 Creative Habits & Systems

A deeper breakdown of how daily repetition becomes the foundation of long-term creative output.
→ /creative-habits-system

📚 Reading as Creative Input (For Readers Pillar)

Explores how repeated exposure to ideas through reading shapes the patterns you unconsciously reproduce in your own work.
→ /reading-as-creative-fuel

🧠 What Makes These “Good Links”

Each one answers:

Why this matters right now in this section
What idea it expands
How it connects to the reader’s thinking journey
⚡ The Core Rule (This Will Simplify Everything)
A good internal link is NOT:

“relevant to the topic”

A good internal link IS:

“the next logical place this idea goes”

🔥 One-Line Definition for Your System

Internal Links Block =

Contextual bridges that extend the idea into your broader content system.

Think of it as:

“Where this idea connects inside your own world”

🔗 TEXT MODULE (INTERNAL LINKS BLOCK) — REAL-LIFE EXAMPLE
🎯 Example context:

Section: Identity Is Built Through Repetition

🔗 Internal Links: Where This Idea Connects

This idea doesn’t stand alone—it shows up across the entire Creative Intelligence system.

🧠 Pillar Connection

Creative Intelligence — Thinking as a Repeatable System
This post expands on how repetition turns creative thinking into a structured process rather than random inspiration.
→ /creative-intelligence-pillar

🔁 Related Post (Same Category)

How to Build a Creative Habit That Actually Sticks
A practical breakdown of how daily repetition becomes creative identity over time.
→ /creative-habits-consistency-system

🎭 Cross-Pillar Connection (Power Link)

Why Reading Shapes How You Create (For Readers Pillar)
Explores how input (reading) directly influences the patterns that repetition reinforces in creative output.
→ /for-readers-reading-as-creative-fuel

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Photo of structural girders at night for blog post “✍️ How to Write a Novel That Actually Works — Structure, Story, and Creative Process.” Photo by Alain Pham on Unsplash

2️⃣ Story Structure — Found, Not Forced

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📌 What is it?

Story structure isn’t something you impose on a narrative from the outside, although this does sound a little counter-intuitive, especially if you're more of an organized writer.

In the end, it’s something you discover as the story develops.

While traditional frameworks can be helpful, they often become restrictive when applied too early.

In practice, structure reveals itself through relationships between scenes, pacing shifts, and moments of change within the story.

It’s less about following a template and more about recognizing the natural rhythm that forms as the narrative grows.

Beginning writers often seem hell-bent on arguing-- in which-came-first, the chicken or the egg fashion-- over which is more important, structure or free-range writing, and over which is more important, character or plot.

Don’t slowly sink into that quick-sand.

You’ll find the real answer is a combination of the two, and arguing about which is more important is just a waste of time.

Get back to that first draft, instead!

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🔍 Should you follow a specific structure like the three-act model?

🎯 Use structure as a tool, not a rule.

🎯 Why it matters

3–6 sentences
• Tie to:
◦ Creative Intelligence
◦ Systems / Perception / Agency

Back to the Big Faulkner. William. A "Splendid Failure" of PerspectiveFaulkner described the book as his "most splendid failure" because he felt he never successfully "told" Caddy's story.Multiple Attempts: He first tried telling the story through the eyes of the mentally disabled Benjy, then the neurotic Quentin, and finally the cynical Jason.Caddy’s Absence: Faulkner eventually decided that Caddy was "too beautiful and too moving" to tell the story herself; instead, she became the missing center, defined only through the biased and fragmented perspectives of her brothers.Back to the Big Faulkner. William. A "Splendid Failure" of PerspectiveFaulkner described the book as his "most splendid failure" because he felt he never successfully "told" Caddy's story.Multiple Attempts: He first tried telling the story through the eyes of the mentally disabled Benjy, then the neurotic Quentin, and finally the cynical Jason.Caddy’s Absence: Faulkner eventually decided that Caddy was "too beautiful and too moving" to tell the story herself; instead, she became the missing center, defined only through the biased and fragmented perspectives of her brothers.Back to the Big Faulkner. William. A "Splendid Failure" of PerspectiveFaulkner described the book as his "most splendid failure" because he felt he never successfully "told" Caddy's story.Multiple Attempts: He first tried telling the story through the eyes of the mentally disabled Benjy, then the neurotic Quentin, and finally the cynical Jason.Caddy’s Absence: Faulkner eventually decided that Caddy was "too beautiful and too moving" to tell the story herself; instead, she became the missing center, defined only through the biased and fragmented perspectives of her brothers.Back to the Big Faulkner. William. A "Splendid Failure" of PerspectiveFaulkner described the book as his "most splendid failure" because he felt he never successfully "told" Caddy's story.Multiple Attempts: He first tried telling the story through the eyes of the mentally disabled Benjy, then the neurotic Quentin, and finally the cynical Jason.Caddy’s Absence: Faulkner eventually decided that Caddy was "too beautiful and too moving" to tell the story herself; instead, she became the missing center, defined only through the biased and fragmented perspectives of her brothers.Back to the Big Faulkner. William. A "Splendid Failure" of PerspectiveFaulkner described the book as his "most splendid failure" because he felt he never successfully "told" Caddy's story.Multiple Attempts: He first tried telling the story through the eyes of the mentally disabled Benjy, then the neurotic Quentin, and finally the cynical Jason.Caddy’s Absence: Faulkner eventually decided that Caddy was "too beautiful and too moving" to tell the story herself; instead, she became the missing center, defined only through the biased and fragmented perspectives of her brothers.

🧩 Blended Paragraph Opportunity (Strong Section)
💡 Insight: Structure is often discovered after the fact
📈 Expansion: Patterns appear once enough material exists
👁️ Observation: Scenes begin to relate to each other naturally
✍️ Personal: (Add your experience discovering structure in Novel Noir)
🔁 Reflection: Structure is recognition, not invention

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🧩 Writing Approaches — How They Work (and Why They Matter)

Writing Approach Outcome Key Insight
Over-Planning Early clarity but limited discovery Too much structure too soon can block originality
Discovery Writing Organic but sometimes unfocused You often need to explore before things make sense
Character-Driven Writing Stronger emotional engagement Characters give meaning to plot
Structure-First Writing Organized but potentially rigid Structure works best after discovery
Integrated Process Balanced and cohesive storytelling Strong stories combine multiple approaches

Real-world application or scenario

🧪 Example

A midpoint or turning point might only become obvious after writing several chapters.

2–5 actionable steps

💡 How to Apply/Understand It 

Write freely → then organize.

ONE strong sentence only

💬 Memorable Line 

“Structure is what you notice when the story starts making sense.”

Text Module (Internal Links Block)

 

Text Module (Internal Links Block)
Include:
• 🔗 Pillar link (required)
• 🔗 1 related post (or placeholder)
• 🔗 Optional cross-pillar link

🔗 REAL-LIFE EXAMPLE (YOUR STYLE)

Let’s say your section is:

“Identity Is Built Through Repetition”
🔗 Internal Links Block (Proper Version)

This idea shows up across your entire creative system—not just here.

Every link must serve ONE of these functions:

🧭 1. CONTEXT (Why this idea exists here)

→ Pillar links

🔁 2. EXPANSION (Where this idea continues)

→ Sibling links

🌐 3. CONNECTION (Where ideas intersect)

→ Cross-pillar links

⚖️ STEP 3: DECISION FILTER (SHOULD YOU EVEN LINK?)

Before adding any link, ask:

1. Does this expand the idea?

If no → don’t link

2. Does this feel like a natural next thought?

If no → don’t link

3. Would the reader benefit from deeper exploration here?

If no → don’t link

👉 If you fail 2/3 → remove it

🧠 Creative Intelligence Pillar

Repetition is one of the core mechanisms behind how creative thinking becomes a structured system instead of random inspiration.
→ /creative-intelligence-pillar

🔁 Creative Habits & Systems

A deeper breakdown of how daily repetition becomes the foundation of long-term creative output.
→ /creative-habits-system

📚 Reading as Creative Input (For Readers Pillar)

Explores how repeated exposure to ideas through reading shapes the patterns you unconsciously reproduce in your own work.
→ /reading-as-creative-fuel

🧠 What Makes These “Good Links”

Each one answers:

Why this matters right now in this section
What idea it expands
How it connects to the reader’s thinking journey
⚡ The Core Rule (This Will Simplify Everything)
A good internal link is NOT:

“relevant to the topic”

A good internal link IS:

“the next logical place this idea goes”

🔥 One-Line Definition for Your System

Internal Links Block =

Contextual bridges that extend the idea into your broader content system.

Think of it as:

“Where this idea connects inside your own world”

🔗 TEXT MODULE (INTERNAL LINKS BLOCK) — REAL-LIFE EXAMPLE
🎯 Example context:

Section: Identity Is Built Through Repetition

🔗 Internal Links: Where This Idea Connects

This idea doesn’t stand alone—it shows up across the entire Creative Intelligence system.

🧠 Pillar Connection

Creative Intelligence — Thinking as a Repeatable System
This post expands on how repetition turns creative thinking into a structured process rather than random inspiration.
→ /creative-intelligence-pillar

🔁 Related Post (Same Category)

How to Build a Creative Habit That Actually Sticks
A practical breakdown of how daily repetition becomes creative identity over time.
→ /creative-habits-consistency-system

🎭 Cross-Pillar Connection (Power Link)

Why Reading Shapes How You Create (For Readers Pillar)
Explores how input (reading) directly influences the patterns that repetition reinforces in creative output.
→ /for-readers-reading-as-creative-fuel

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Your content goes here. Edit or remove this text inline or in the module Content settings. You can also style every aspect of this content in the module Design settings and even apply custom CSS to this text in the module Advanced settings. 

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Photo of two paths in the woods for blog post “✍️ How to Write a Novel That Actually Works — Structure, Story, and Creative Process” Photo by Jens Lelie on Unsplash

3️⃣ Character Decisions Drive Everything

📌 What is it?

At its core, a story moves forward because characters make decisions.

Plot events may create situations, but it’s the choices characters make within those situations that generate meaning and momentum.

These decisions are shaped by desire, fear, conflict, and uncertainty, and they determine not only what happens next, but why it matters.

When character decisions are clear and consequential, the story feels alive rather than mechanical.

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🔍 What actually moves a story forward?

🎯 Character decisions—not just events.

🎯 Why it matters

3–6 sentences
• Tie to:
◦ Creative Intelligence
◦ Systems / Perception / Agency

Plot without character feels mechanical.

Blended Thinking Block (Text Module)
Format inside module:
• 🧠 Insight
• 🔄 Expansion
• 🔍 Observation
• ✍️ Personal
• 🔁 Reflection

kim wieland: on no sequels

I made this mistake early in my writing history.

But I know better now.

A string ofd exciting scenes, following one after another, sounds like a great answer to keep readers turning the pages.

But if the reader doesn’t get a glimpse inside that character’s head, the reader won’t car about all those atomic-bomb events that you think will keep them glued to the page.

Which do the think would keep a reader reading:
A) superman end of world
B) a little boy who wants his dad one for his birthday

 

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Your content goes here. Edit or remove this text inline or in the module Content settings. You can also style every aspect of this content in the module Design settings and even apply custom CSS to this text in the module Advanced settings. 

Real-world application or scenario

🧪 Example

Two identical plots feel completely different depending on:

• Motivation
• Hesitation

2–5 actionable steps

💡 How to Apply/Understand It 

“Plot happens when characters make decisions they can’t undo.”

ONE strong sentence only

💬 Memorable Line 

"Stories are how culture remembers what it cannot keep."

Text Module (Internal Links Block)

 

Text Module (Internal Links Block)
Include:
• 🔗 Pillar link (required)
• 🔗 1 related post (or placeholder)
• 🔗 Optional cross-pillar link

🔗 REAL-LIFE EXAMPLE (YOUR STYLE)

Let’s say your section is:

“Identity Is Built Through Repetition”
🔗 Internal Links Block (Proper Version)

This idea shows up across your entire creative system—not just here.

Every link must serve ONE of these functions:

🧭 1. CONTEXT (Why this idea exists here)

→ Pillar links

🔁 2. EXPANSION (Where this idea continues)

→ Sibling links

🌐 3. CONNECTION (Where ideas intersect)

→ Cross-pillar links

⚖️ STEP 3: DECISION FILTER (SHOULD YOU EVEN LINK?)

Before adding any link, ask:

1. Does this expand the idea?

If no → don’t link

2. Does this feel like a natural next thought?

If no → don’t link

3. Would the reader benefit from deeper exploration here?

If no → don’t link

👉 If you fail 2/3 → remove it

🧠 Creative Intelligence Pillar

Repetition is one of the core mechanisms behind how creative thinking becomes a structured system instead of random inspiration.
→ /creative-intelligence-pillar

🔁 Creative Habits & Systems

A deeper breakdown of how daily repetition becomes the foundation of long-term creative output.
→ /creative-habits-system

📚 Reading as Creative Input (For Readers Pillar)

Explores how repeated exposure to ideas through reading shapes the patterns you unconsciously reproduce in your own work.
→ /reading-as-creative-fuel

🧠 What Makes These “Good Links”

Each one answers:

Why this matters right now in this section
What idea it expands
How it connects to the reader’s thinking journey
⚡ The Core Rule (This Will Simplify Everything)
A good internal link is NOT:

“relevant to the topic”

A good internal link IS:

“the next logical place this idea goes”

🔥 One-Line Definition for Your System

Internal Links Block =

Contextual bridges that extend the idea into your broader content system.

Think of it as:

“Where this idea connects inside your own world”

🔗 TEXT MODULE (INTERNAL LINKS BLOCK) — REAL-LIFE EXAMPLE
🎯 Example context:

Section: Identity Is Built Through Repetition

🔗 Internal Links: Where This Idea Connects

This idea doesn’t stand alone—it shows up across the entire Creative Intelligence system.

🧠 Pillar Connection

Creative Intelligence — Thinking as a Repeatable System
This post expands on how repetition turns creative thinking into a structured process rather than random inspiration.
→ /creative-intelligence-pillar

🔁 Related Post (Same Category)

How to Build a Creative Habit That Actually Sticks
A practical breakdown of how daily repetition becomes creative identity over time.
→ /creative-habits-consistency-system

🎭 Cross-Pillar Connection (Power Link)

Why Reading Shapes How You Create (For Readers Pillar)
Explores how input (reading) directly influences the patterns that repetition reinforces in creative output.
→ /for-readers-reading-as-creative-fuel

Your content goes here. Edit or remove this text inline or in the module Content settings. You can also style every aspect of this content in the module Design settings and even apply custom CSS to this text in the module Advanced settings. 

Your content goes here. Edit or remove this text inline or in the module Content settings. You can also style every aspect of this content in the module Design settings and even apply custom CSS to this text in the module Advanced settings. 

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Photo of crumpled paper with the word 'ideas' on it for blog post “✍️ How to Write a Novel That Actually Works — Structure, Story, and Creative Process.” Photo by Nick Fewings on Unsplash

4️⃣ Turning Ideas Into a Cohesive Story

📌 What is it?

This stage of writing is where scattered ideas begin to organize into something unified.

Early in the process, it’s common to have multiple concepts that feel disconnected or incomplete.

Cohesion doesn’t come from removing ideas. It comes from understanding how they relate to each other.

As connections form, themes emerge, and the story begins to take on a clearer identity.

What once felt like separate pieces starts to function as part of a larger whole.

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🔍 Why do ideas feel scattered early on?

🎯 Because they haven’t found their connection yet.

🎯 Why it matters

3–6 sentences
• Tie to:
◦ Creative Intelligence
◦ Systems / Perception / Agency

📍 [COMMENT AREA — This is a strong place for your voice]
Expand on:
• your “too many ideas” phase
• what it f

novel noir BTS

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Blended Thinking Block (Text Module)
Format inside module:
• 🧠 Insight
• 🔄 Expansion
• 🔍 Observation
• ✍️ Personal
• 🔁 Reflection

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Your content goes here. Edit or remove this text inline or in the module Content settings. You can also style every aspect of this content in the module Design settings and even apply custom CSS to this text in the module Advanced settings. 

Your content goes here. Edit or remove this text inline or in the module Content settings. You can also style every aspect of this content in the module Design settings and even apply custom CSS to this text in the module Advanced settings. 

Real-world application or scenario

🧪 Example

Multiple ideas may seem unrelated until one concept ties them together.

2–5 actionable steps

💡 How to Apply/Understand It 

Instead of cutting ideas, look for relationships between them

ONE strong sentence only

💬 Memorable Line 

“The problem isn’t too many ideas. It’s not knowing how they connect yet.”

Text Module (Internal Links Block)

 

Text Module (Internal Links Block)
Include:
• 🔗 Pillar link (required)
• 🔗 1 related post (or placeholder)
• 🔗 Optional cross-pillar link

🔗 REAL-LIFE EXAMPLE (YOUR STYLE)

Let’s say your section is:

“Identity Is Built Through Repetition”
🔗 Internal Links Block (Proper Version)

This idea shows up across your entire creative system—not just here.

Every link must serve ONE of these functions:

🧭 1. CONTEXT (Why this idea exists here)

→ Pillar links

🔁 2. EXPANSION (Where this idea continues)

→ Sibling links

🌐 3. CONNECTION (Where ideas intersect)

→ Cross-pillar links

⚖️ STEP 3: DECISION FILTER (SHOULD YOU EVEN LINK?)

Before adding any link, ask:

1. Does this expand the idea?

If no → don’t link

2. Does this feel like a natural next thought?

If no → don’t link

3. Would the reader benefit from deeper exploration here?

If no → don’t link

👉 If you fail 2/3 → remove it

🧠 Creative Intelligence Pillar

Repetition is one of the core mechanisms behind how creative thinking becomes a structured system instead of random inspiration.
→ /creative-intelligence-pillar

🔁 Creative Habits & Systems

A deeper breakdown of how daily repetition becomes the foundation of long-term creative output.
→ /creative-habits-system

📚 Reading as Creative Input (For Readers Pillar)

Explores how repeated exposure to ideas through reading shapes the patterns you unconsciously reproduce in your own work.
→ /reading-as-creative-fuel

🧠 What Makes These “Good Links”

Each one answers:

Why this matters right now in this section
What idea it expands
How it connects to the reader’s thinking journey
⚡ The Core Rule (This Will Simplify Everything)
A good internal link is NOT:

“relevant to the topic”

A good internal link IS:

“the next logical place this idea goes”

🔥 One-Line Definition for Your System

Internal Links Block =

Contextual bridges that extend the idea into your broader content system.

Think of it as:

“Where this idea connects inside your own world”

🔗 TEXT MODULE (INTERNAL LINKS BLOCK) — REAL-LIFE EXAMPLE
🎯 Example context:

Section: Identity Is Built Through Repetition

🔗 Internal Links: Where This Idea Connects

This idea doesn’t stand alone—it shows up across the entire Creative Intelligence system.

🧠 Pillar Connection

Creative Intelligence — Thinking as a Repeatable System
This post expands on how repetition turns creative thinking into a structured process rather than random inspiration.
→ /creative-intelligence-pillar

🔁 Related Post (Same Category)

How to Build a Creative Habit That Actually Sticks
A practical breakdown of how daily repetition becomes creative identity over time.
→ /creative-habits-consistency-system

🎭 Cross-Pillar Connection (Power Link)

Why Reading Shapes How You Create (For Readers Pillar)
Explores how input (reading) directly influences the patterns that repetition reinforces in creative output.
→ /for-readers-reading-as-creative-fuel

Your content goes here. Edit or remove this text inline or in the module Content settings. You can also style every aspect of this content in the module Design settings and even apply custom CSS to this text in the module Advanced settings. 

Your content goes here. Edit or remove this text inline or in the module Content settings. You can also style every aspect of this content in the module Design settings and even apply custom CSS to this text in the module Advanced settings. 

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Photo of sun breaking through the clouds for blog post “✍️ How to Write a Novel That Actually Works — Structure, Story, and Creative Process.” Photo by moerwijk on Unsplash

5️⃣ The Breakthrough Moment — When Everything Aligns

📌 What is it?

The breakthrough moment is the point in the writing process where the story shifts from uncertainty to clarity.

It doesn’t necessarily mean the work is finished, but it signals that the underlying structure and direction have become clear.

This moment often comes unexpectedly, after a period of exploration, and is marked by a sense that the pieces finally fit together.

From this point forward, writing becomes less about searching and more about refining and expanding what already works.

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🔍 When does a story finally ‘work’?

🎯 When the pieces begin to reinforce each other.

🎯 Why it matters

3–6 sentences
• Tie to:
◦ Creative Intelligence
◦ Systems / Perception / Agency

The novel's form was also shaped by Faulkner's professional frustration.

After his previous manuscript, Flags in the Dust, was rejected by multiple publishers, he felt his career was over.

This "mood of despair" freed him to write exactly as he pleased, without regard for commercial success, leading to the novel's radical stream-of-consciousness experiments.

 

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Blended Thinking Block (Text Module)
Format inside module:
• 🧠 Insight
• 🔄 Expansion
• 🔍 Observation
• ✍️ Personal
• 🔁 Reflection

🧩 Blended Paragraph Opportunity
💡 Insight: Breakthroughs feel like recognition
📈 Expansion: The story reveals its internal logic
👁️ Observation: Earlier ideas suddenly fit together
✍️ Personal: (Your cruise ship / structural realization moment)
🔁 Reflection: Clarity often arrives later than expected

Sadly, this is a recurring theme for me, as well.

A context of despair is sometimes necessary to find a brand-new idea and gamble that it might work, as opposed to continuing to do what you’ve always done, even though it doesn’t work.

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Real-world application or scenario

🧪 Example

A setting, structure, or constraint suddenly organizes everything else.

2–5 actionable steps

💡 How to Apply/Understand It 

Stay in the process long enough to reach this point.

ONE strong sentence only

💬 Memorable Line 

“The story works when everything starts belonging.”

Text Module (Internal Links Block)

 

Text Module (Internal Links Block)
Include:
• 🔗 Pillar link (required)
• 🔗 1 related post (or placeholder)
• 🔗 Optional cross-pillar link

🔗 REAL-LIFE EXAMPLE (YOUR STYLE)

Let’s say your section is:

“Identity Is Built Through Repetition”
🔗 Internal Links Block (Proper Version)

This idea shows up across your entire creative system—not just here.

Every link must serve ONE of these functions:

🧭 1. CONTEXT (Why this idea exists here)

→ Pillar links

🔁 2. EXPANSION (Where this idea continues)

→ Sibling links

🌐 3. CONNECTION (Where ideas intersect)

→ Cross-pillar links

⚖️ STEP 3: DECISION FILTER (SHOULD YOU EVEN LINK?)

Before adding any link, ask:

1. Does this expand the idea?

If no → don’t link

2. Does this feel like a natural next thought?

If no → don’t link

3. Would the reader benefit from deeper exploration here?

If no → don’t link

👉 If you fail 2/3 → remove it

🧠 Creative Intelligence Pillar

Repetition is one of the core mechanisms behind how creative thinking becomes a structured system instead of random inspiration.
→ /creative-intelligence-pillar

🔁 Creative Habits & Systems

A deeper breakdown of how daily repetition becomes the foundation of long-term creative output.
→ /creative-habits-system

📚 Reading as Creative Input (For Readers Pillar)

Explores how repeated exposure to ideas through reading shapes the patterns you unconsciously reproduce in your own work.
→ /reading-as-creative-fuel

🧠 What Makes These “Good Links”

Each one answers:

Why this matters right now in this section
What idea it expands
How it connects to the reader’s thinking journey
⚡ The Core Rule (This Will Simplify Everything)
A good internal link is NOT:

“relevant to the topic”

A good internal link IS:

“the next logical place this idea goes”

🔥 One-Line Definition for Your System

Internal Links Block =

Contextual bridges that extend the idea into your broader content system.

Think of it as:

“Where this idea connects inside your own world”

🔗 TEXT MODULE (INTERNAL LINKS BLOCK) — REAL-LIFE EXAMPLE
🎯 Example context:

Section: Identity Is Built Through Repetition

🔗 Internal Links: Where This Idea Connects

This idea doesn’t stand alone—it shows up across the entire Creative Intelligence system.

🧠 Pillar Connection

Creative Intelligence — Thinking as a Repeatable System
This post expands on how repetition turns creative thinking into a structured process rather than random inspiration.
→ /creative-intelligence-pillar

🔁 Related Post (Same Category)

How to Build a Creative Habit That Actually Sticks
A practical breakdown of how daily repetition becomes creative identity over time.
→ /creative-habits-consistency-system

🎭 Cross-Pillar Connection (Power Link)

Why Reading Shapes How You Create (For Readers Pillar)
Explores how input (reading) directly influences the patterns that repetition reinforces in creative output.
→ /for-readers-reading-as-creative-fuel

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🟠 4) CONCLUSION SECTION
🎯 Module 13: Divider (Visual break)

🎯 Module 14: Text Module (Conclusion)
• Synthesis of main idea
• Emotional closure
• Insight reflection

Photo of sign that reads "Love to Learn" for blog post “✍️ How to Write a Novel That Actually Works — Structure, Story, and Creative Process.” Photo by Tim Mossholder on Unsplash

✍️ Where Everything Starts to Make Sense

For me, personally, writing a novel isn’t about getting everything right from the beginning.

It’s about staying with the process long enough for the story to reveal itself.

The shift doesn’t happen when you add more ideas, but when you begin to understand how the ones you already have fit together.

Next Steps = What the reader does next

🔴 5) NEXT STEPS (ACTION ZONE — HIGH PRIORITY)
🎯 Module 15: Call To Action Module OR Text Module
Include:
• 1–3 actions
• Challenge or prompt
• Direct instruction tone
👉 This is your conversion point

🔴 Next Steps Module = Behavior Trigger
Converts insight into action immediately
Captures peak motivation (right after conclusion)
Creates identity shift (“I am someone who shows up daily”)

🔴 🔥 NEXT STEPS MODULE (REAL-LIFE EXAMPLE)

🎯 Module Type: Text Module or CTA Module

🚀 What to Do Next (Turn Insight Into Action)

 

You’ve just seen how consistency—not talent—is what actually builds creative momentum over time. But insight only matters if it becomes behavior.

 

Here’s how to apply it immediately:

 

✍️ Write for 10 minutes today—no editing, no stopping

(The goal is continuation, not quality)

🔁 Set a minimum creative output rule for the next 7 days

(Example: 200 words, 1 sketch, 1 idea log entry)

📅 Pick one fixed time tomorrow and repeat it daily for a week

(Same time. Same place. No negotiation.)

 

👉 If you only do one thing, do this:

show up again tomorrow, even if today felt small

 

💡 Micro-Challenge

 

Commit to a 7-day consistency streak and track it visually.

Don’t measure quality. Measure repetition.

 

🔗 Bridge Line (Optional Internal Link)

 

Want to go deeper into how systems remove creative burnout?

→ Read next: Why Most Creatives Burn Out (And How Systems Prevent It)

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*️⃣ Next Steps

Well, let's see. You're Artistic. Brilliant. Creative. Maybe even more. Don't pretend like you don't have something to say. Come on. Don't hold out on the rest of us. Leave your comments below.

Start writing before the story is clear. Clarity is something you build into, not start with.

Image of woman's head exploding into colors.

🟡 6) FAQ SECTION (SEO ENGINE)
🎯 Module 16: Toggle Module (FAQ Set)
Each FAQ:
• Question (title)
• Answer (content)

🎯 Module 17: Code Module (FAQ Schema JSON-LD)
• Structured data block
• Always placed after FAQ toggles

 

*️⃣ FAQ

FAQ Image
...about Writing.
How do I start writing a novel?

Begin with a single idea or scene and allow the story to grow from there.

Do I need an outline?


Not necessarily.

Many writers discover structure as they go.

What matters more, plot or character?


Character decisions are what make plot meaningful.

Why does my story feel unclear?


Clarity often comes later, after enough material exists.

How do I know if my story is working?

When the pieces begin to connect and reinforce each other.

ADD SCHEMA CODE HERE AS VERY LAST STEP. MUST EXACTLY MATCH the FAQ. THEN CHECK GOOGLE.

Explore More = Why this is true beyond your blog

🔷 7) EXPLORE MORE (AUTHORITY MODULE)
🎯 Module 18: Text Module (Section Header)
🎯 Module 19: Blurb or Text Modules (3–5 items max)
Each item includes:
• Title
• 1-line explanation
• External URL

✔ External credibility + depth expansion
✔ Signals research quality

🎯 Module Type: Text Module or CTA Module

🚀 What to Do Next (Turn Insight Into Action)

🔍 Explore More Module = Authority + Depth Trigger
Builds trust with external validation
Extends time on page
Signals research-backed thinking to Google
Turns your blog into a gateway, not a dead end

 

 

 

 

🔍 Explore More: The Science Behind Consistency and Creative Mastery

If you want to understand why consistency actually rewires creative performance, these resources go deeper into the psychology and research behind it:


📘 The Making of an Expert — Harvard Business Review

Explores how deliberate practice—not talent—is the foundation of mastery.
https://hbr.org/2007/07/the-making-of-an-expert


🧠 How Creativity Works in the Brain — American Psychological Association

Breaks down how repetition strengthens neural pathways tied to creative thinking.
https://www.apa.org/monitor/nov01/creativity


🔁 Habit Formation Research — University College London

Explains how long it actually takes to build consistent behavior patterns.
https://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/2009/aug/how-long-does-it-take-form-habit


🎨 The Creative Brain — Scientific American

Looks at how structured thinking enhances imagination over time.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-creative-brain/


📊 Practice and Performance Retention — National Institutes of Health

Research showing how repetition improves long-term skill stability.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4326095/


💡 Why This Matters

Talent might get attention.
But consistency builds measurable cognitive change over time.


🧠 WHY THESE WORK (STRATEGIC BREAKDOWN)

🔴 Next Steps Module = Behavior Trigger

  • Converts insight into action immediately
  • Captures peak motivation (right after conclusion)
  • Creates identity shift (“I am someone who shows up daily”)

🔍 Explore More Module = Authority + Depth Trigger

  • Builds trust with external validation
  • Extends time on page
  • Signals research-backed thinking to Google
  • Turns your blog into a gateway, not a dead end

⚡ SIMPLE RULE TO REMEMBER

  • Next Steps = What the reader does next
  • Explore More = Why this is true beyond your blog

If you want the next upgrade, I can turn these into:

  • a Divi drag-and-drop module pack
  • or a reusable CTA + Explore library you can swap into any post instantly

Explore More = Why this is true beyond your blog

🔷 7) EXPLORE MORE (AUTHORITY MODULE)
🎯 Module 18: Text Module (Section Header)
🎯 Module 19: Blurb or Text Modules (3–5 items max)
Each item includes:
• Title
• 1-line explanation
• External URL

✔ External credibility + depth expansion
✔ Signals research quality

🎯 Module Type: Text Module or CTA Module

🚀 What to Do Next (Turn Insight Into Action)

🔍 Explore More Module = Authority + Depth Trigger
Builds trust with external validation
Extends time on page
Signals research-backed thinking to Google
Turns your blog into a gateway, not a dead end

 

 

 

 

🔍 Explore More: The Science Behind Consistency and Creative Mastery

If you want to understand why consistency actually rewires creative performance, these resources go deeper into the psychology and research behind it:


📘 The Making of an Expert — Harvard Business Review

Explores how deliberate practice—not talent—is the foundation of mastery.
https://hbr.org/2007/07/the-making-of-an-expert


🧠 How Creativity Works in the Brain — American Psychological Association

Breaks down how repetition strengthens neural pathways tied to creative thinking.
https://www.apa.org/monitor/nov01/creativity


🔁 Habit Formation Research — University College London

Explains how long it actually takes to build consistent behavior patterns.
https://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/2009/aug/how-long-does-it-take-form-habit


🎨 The Creative Brain — Scientific American

Looks at how structured thinking enhances imagination over time.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/the-creative-brain/


📊 Practice and Performance Retention — National Institutes of Health

Research showing how repetition improves long-term skill stability.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4326095/


💡 Why This Matters

Talent might get attention.
But consistency builds measurable cognitive change over time.


🧠 WHY THESE WORK (STRATEGIC BREAKDOWN)

🔴 Next Steps Module = Behavior Trigger

  • Converts insight into action immediately
  • Captures peak motivation (right after conclusion)
  • Creates identity shift (“I am someone who shows up daily”)

🔍 Explore More Module = Authority + Depth Trigger

  • Builds trust with external validation
  • Extends time on page
  • Signals research-backed thinking to Google
  • Turns your blog into a gateway, not a dead end

⚡ SIMPLE RULE TO REMEMBER

  • Next Steps = What the reader does next
  • Explore More = Why this is true beyond your blog

If you want the next upgrade, I can turn these into:

  • a Divi drag-and-drop module pack
  • or a reusable CTA + Explore library you can swap into any post instantly

*️⃣ 🔍 Explore More: XXX

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🟣 8) RELATED POSTS (INTERNAL NETWORK LAYER)
🎯 Module 20: Text Module (Header)
🎯 Module 21: Blurb Modules (or Text List)
Each includes:
• Post title
• Short description
• Internal link
Grouped by:
• Same pillar
• Supporting post
• Cross-pillar (optional)

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*️⃣ Author Bio

Photo of author Lewis Faulkner

Lewis Faulkner is the author of six novels and a creative educator with over 40 years of experience studying story structure, narrative craft, and the creative process.

His work often explores how systems shape perception and how individuals respond. y

*️⃣ Comments

Come On.

You know you've got something to say.

Lewis Faulkner | Novelist
FaulknerFiction.com
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