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User_3471
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It doesn’t always work that way. I make my living as a writer/editor. I have had many projects that didn’t end up where my original “planning” put them. Stories evolve. Like a person, they start as an infant and as they grow, they are pulled in different directions until they become what they are at the end. Stories are hard written into ink. Life teaches us that a human can learn many things, be many things and evolve. A printed story however has a narrow trajectory where you can’t simply go right or left without considering everything behind you.That's why they should plan well ahead. That's the 7 Ps - Prior Planning and Preparation Prevents Piss Poor Performance.
A couple years ago, I sold a short story to a developer who read it, loved it and then asked me to make changes somewhere near the middle of the story. It took me four rewrites to get the story fleshed out in a way that met his needs. Planning can’t account for things like new ideas, plot holes and something as simple as a small detail that causes the writer to go, “Hang on! I can’t do that without going back three chapters and changing everything.”
Writing isn’t about planning. We writers build stories that mirror life. We aren’t writing a users manual for a toaster.