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Martha Alderson

Plot Consultant

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How to Reveal A Character’s Backstory Wound

July 27, 2016 By Martha Alderson

A character’s backstory directly impacts her front story by the beliefs and people she was raised with, her education, her emotional development. Often something in her backstory caused a wound—either physical, psychic, or both. Anything in her past that now directly interferes with a character achieving her dream or goal in the front story is called a backstory wound. (If you enjoy exercises to improve your relationship with your writing and your life, as you read How To Reveal a Character’s Backstory Wound consider not only for your characters but how the plot elements play out in your personal life.)

How to Reveal A Character’s Backstory Wound

Conscious or Forgotten

The backstory wound can be conscious or forgotten. Either way, over time, a buildup of pain and suffering forms a burden on the protagonist’s heart. Stories show a character shedding her backstory toward the end of the story and reawakening a belief in the miraculous.

Each protagonist has a valuable asset just waiting to be mined that she and most others don’t even notice until she shrugs off her backstory, at least long enough to seize the prize at the end.

Defines Sense of Self

The wound can happen at any age and at any point at which the protagonist is diminished. Something occurs to mask the sense of the miraculous in the protagonist with thoughts and beliefs that reflect a misrepresentation of who she truly is. This illusory identity then becomes like a ghost structure and the basis for all of her future interpretations about life. As long as she defines her sense of self from old damage and as being less than extraordinary, she lives an unfulfilled life. A backstory wound is a lesser or greater trail of damage across her heart and limits her capacity for love.

Because a backstory is usually filled with fear, loathing, and pain, it is often buried. Thus, the backstory reveal toward the end of the middle of the story is often painful and difficult for the character to discern and integrate. Often, before a sense of freedom and a tranquil heart prevails, first comes forgiveness.

For the protagonist to complete her transformation at the end of the story, first she must reshape her center in herself and find stability in her own inner ground.

Four Ways to Reveal a Character’s Backstory Wound

  1. The story begins at the moment of loss and moves forward from there.
  2. The story begins at the moment of loss and jumps in time where the front story begins.
  3. The front story begins the story and the backstory is shown in flashback.
  4. The front story begins the story and the backstory is shown through the character’s behavior and the choices she makes.

Less than Perfect

The backstory wound makes the character less than perfect, which makes her believable and easier for readers and audiences to identify with. When a reader connects with what happens to the protagonist, she becomes united with that character in an intimate way. The audience’s concern and compassion comes alive as they live the story.

One way for the reader to connect with the protagonist of your story is through her backstory wound.

Development of the Backstory Wound

Untended and left to fester, the wound spins the protagonist into an unproductive repetition of behaviors and habits and patterns that doom her to failure. These unproductive habits are shown in various degrees in the beginning of the story.

In the middle of the story, she is subjected to greater and greater complications. Her backstory wound interferes in greater and greater measure.

After the crisis toward the end of the middle, she acknowledges the true source of her limitations. Herself. Throughout the final quarter of the story, she struggles to trust, rely on, and be true to herself. As she does, she find she has all she needs. Slowly she modifies her behavior to act in a manner most natural to her. When she begins to use her innate abilities, life improve for her. Freed from her self-imposed limitations, she seizes the prize at the end of the story.

freedom and wildness

Toward Transformation

The external action is a result of the protagonist’s efforts moving forward toward her goal only to be blocked by the antagonists. This can be seen as an insistence that the protagonist find out for herself the truth about

  • her life
  • the mystery
  • the romance
  • the dilemma
  • the villain
  • the murderer

She no longer accepts someone else’s word or a reality that is refracted through the lens of her backstory wound.

The ultimate test of cause and effect is to track the healing of the backstory wound as the character transforms through the course of the story. The healing of the backstory wound is unspoken and manifests itself through the transformed action taken by the protagonist. Whatever other gifts she seizes at the climax, an unspoken one is her newfound belief that her very presence in the world is itself the primal gift.

Plot Whisperer Workbook

Excerpt Taken From

 from The Plot Whisperer Workbook: Step-by-Step Exercises to Help You Write Compelling Stories.

Previous Post: « Character or Action-Driven Writers? Take the Test
Next Post: Anticlimax vs Climax »

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Martha lives at the beach along the central coast of California and draws inspiration from the surrounding nature. When not at the beach, she writes women’s fiction and is exploring what it means to leave a lasting legacy. [Read More] about About Martha

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