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Seo In Woo, Yook Dong Shik, and taking things out of context for the hell of it.

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Adam always has a way to end a fightâ¤ď¸
Writing Arguments Between Characters
â Arguments in books are some of the most pivotal and important scenes in a narrative, but theyâre also some of the most difficult because fights, in the moment, can seem much more dramatic in our heads than they would seem to an outsider. The great thing about writing is that you have the option to add context you wouldnât have otherwise, which puts the reader in the charactersâ heads and into the heat of the moment. I decided it was worth an article because itâs a very hit or miss kind of scene to pursue and Iâve received a lot of questions on the subject, so Iâd like to answer (most of) them here. Enjoy!Â
Instigation
Which character began the fight? Sometimes fights start days before they actually turn into a heated argument, so if there is a build up to the scene, make sure youâve taken the time to make that clear in the last couple scenes or chapters.Â
Sometimes, it isnât actually clear to the characters what or who started the argument and it just sort of bubbles up over time or as events make the characters more confused, angry, scared, etc.
Thatâs another thing you need to know before you start writing an argument: what emotion is driving the characters to participate? Fear? Anger? Confusion? Sadness? Frustration? Tiredness? Repression of past feelings? Betrayal? In order to make the characters argue believably, you need to be in their headspace, and you can only do that if you know why theyâre fighting in the first place.
Tone and pace
Build up
In order for an argument to be impactful to the reader, there needs to be some substantial escalation. Fights are like stories. Thereâs something that starts it, thereâs rising tension, thereâs a climax, and then thereâs a cool down period before the resolution. Focus on the way you do the rising action especially, because the climax of the argument should be an âoh sh*tâ moment.
Dialogue & Interraction
There are different types of arguments people can have. Thereâs the slow burn ones that the reader knows are coming, but are still really jarring when they come to pass. There are also the ones that seem like theyâre out of nowhere if you donât have context, but to someone who has been following maybe the past few days of the two peopleâs lives, they can tell that the actual subject of conflict isnât what theyâre really fighting about, but a deeper underlying issue theyâve both been struggling with. There are many ways an argument can go and feel to a reader, but a huge part of the subtext is how the two characters interact.Â
If your characters are screaming about a dish that was put away wet and left a ring on the stained cabinets, it will be fairly obvious to the reader, as that sort of interaction, at surface level, wouldnât serve much of a story-telling purpose, and therefore will lead the reader to assume thereâs more to it and search their arsenal of contextual evidence to find the real source of tension between the characters. This can also be accomplished through clues in dialogue, such as sarcasm in response to when something relating to the actual issue is mentioned, or a lull in the argument when the two characters realize that theyâre not really talking about a stupid bowl, are they?
Resolution
How the argument ends could be used to shift where the reader believes the story is going from there on. The end could be very insignificant to your story, as fights between characters are often used to get across some key information about characters or context or introduce new conflicts, which brings up my next point.
Integration
Arguments are a really good opportunity to integrate lots of important information for your reader in a way that shows instead of telling. You can use arguments to relay lots of information to your reader, such as:
Character tendencies
Relationships between characters
Smaller conflicts
Foreshadowing
Associations that will be useful in future scenes
Shifts in tone
Changes in the direction of the story
Underlying issues that might come up later
and many more.
Some General Tips To Keep In Mind
Always ask yourself âwould so and so really do this?â
During arguments, peopleâs responses will often be blended with their reactions. Their face will be shocked and their words will be sharp. Try to include these little mixes in order to make the pace faster and more suspenseful.
Most large arguments start with something smaller and less significant
A lot of the time, the reactions wonât be like âi canât believe he said that to meâ, theyâll be defensive and/or a shot back without much thought.
Most arguments, especially between two characters who generally like each other, will end with something like one person walking out of the room, one person deciding to sleep on the couch, or one person avoiding or ignoring the other. Most fights between characters who know and matter to each other donât end with a punch in the face.
Arguments donât usually end when theyâre no longer yelling at each other.
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I've been writing a Pusher II x Adam x Charlie Countryman fanfiction under the assumption that Gry and Tonny were siblings and I just found out THEY'RE FUCKING NOT?!??!? I just hallucinated a few lines that validated my own headcanon holy shit
Now I'm wondering whether I should scrap the scenes and rewrite them entirely (sounds exhausting. I don't want to do it) or should I just AU it...

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Change For Me - Chapter 1
An Archive of Our Own, a project of the Organization for Transformative Works
âHej.â
Adam wonders which one he should tally between the two boards heâs been eyeing.
âHej. Er du dĂśv, eller hvad?â
He startles, plucked harshly from the focused thinking heâs doing. He looks to the side and sees a familiar-looking man with a shaved head, wearing a black graphic sweater. Thereâs a baby on his hip, staring wide-eyed at Adam.
âH-hello,â he says.
The man says something in Danish, glancing down at Adamâs pants for a moment before looking expectantly at him.
Adam doesnât know what the stranger wants from him. âI donât understand.â The stranger looks frustrated at that and Adam wonders if heâd said something wrong. So he clarifies, âI canât speak Danish.â
âYou have any money?â the man asks.
âYesâŚâ he replies, frowning in thought. He wonders why he wouldnât have if heâs at the store.
âCan you give me some?â
Oh. Adam computes the money he has on him at the moment. He has a budget in his head for the corkboard, and after he purchases that, he has a bit left in his wallet.
âWell, I still have to buy a corkboard,â he says. âB-but I can give you something after I buy it.â