Breaking Writing Rules Right: "Show, don't Tell"
8 times you need to use Telling in your writing.
Itβs one of the first rules of creative writing youβll hear. It may be the rule you hear the most: βShow, donβt tell.β
Today Iβll explain what that rule means, why itβs in place, and then why following it too closely can actually harm rather than help your writing.
There are places in writing where telling is just frankly better, and even more powerful.
Whatβs the Rule?
The Rule:
Show, donβt tell.
Why itβs a Rule
Honestly, almost any beginning writer who is getting into writing needs to hear this advice, and probably several times. When I was in college, this was like scripture. I heard it every week, if not every day. This is because naturally, we are wired to βtellβ a story rather than βshowβ one. Telling is easier, and if we donβt know the difference, we just do whatβs natural and easy.
But what is the difference? And why does it matter which you use?
Here is an examples of telling:
Emily was tired.
Here is how you would change that example into showing:
Yawning, Emily dragged her backpack on the way to her bedroom. Her eyes drooped shut with each step. She fell into her bed and her shoes blackened the covers. She rubbed her eyesβmascara gritted against her skinβthen flung her arm over her face to block out the light.
In my second example, I donβt just tell the reader Emily is tired, I show them. There are a few reasons to do this. First, if I simply say βEmily was tired,β as an audience, we donβt get a visual for what βtiredβ is, how tired Emily is, or what kind of tired she feels. Itβs vague and general. Is Emily a bored kind of tired? Or physically tired from running a mile? Or sleepy-tired? But when I show it, itβs clear sheβs sleepy-tired. How sleepy-tired? Tired enough that she canβt pick up and carry her backpack, so tired that her eyes droop shut and she doesnβt bother to take off her shoes before βfallingβ into bed. She doesnβt even wash off her makeup or turn off the roomβs light.
Thatβs how tired.
Second, when you show instead of tell it immerses the reader into the story so that they feel like they are experiencing it instead of just reading about it. Itβs like they are there in the house with Emily, or are Emily herself. One of the ways to do this well is to appeal to the senses: sight, sound, touch, smell, and taste. In my second example, I appealed to the senses of sight and touch. (In contrast, in my first example, I appealed to no senses.) Itβs important to immerse the reader, so that they are experiencing the emotions in the story. If you βtellβ them everything, youβre (almost) never putting the emotions in the reader, so the story wonβt be as powerful. When you βshowβ the story to the reader, you are allowing them to interpret and come to their own conclusions, rather then you telling them what to think and believe. They become the character.
If telling still doesnβt seem that βbadβ to you, look at what bland telling looks like sentence after sentence in this example:
They went to their friendβs house to see some cats. They liked them a lot. When they got tired, they called their mom to pick them up, but their mom couldnβt come for two hours. It was cold out, so they went inside and got something warm to eat. Then they drew some pictures before watching t.v.
How much emotion do you feel from that? Do you feel like you are in the story? Does it have you on the edge of you seat? Probably not.
Most all beginning writers write stories this way, which is why learning to show, not tell, is preached just about everywhere. Telling is easy. Showing takes work.
But like any writing rule, if you treat this one like a commandment, it can actually hurt your writing and take the power out of your story.
Why You Need Telling
Here is why you need telling.
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