Mapping your story saves a ton of time! Ranjani, November 20, 2020June 9, 2023 Remember how I said I had a story mapping notebook. Some may find this odd, but this is a small trick that has always worked for me when writing. When it comes to flow and structure, I have a lot of trouble just writing paragraph after paragraph. That kind of writing doesn’t come naturally to me. So, this is my trick. I outline a story before I write it. Many writers do this. It helps you focus on what you want to write and stick to it throughout the piece. My outlines are detailed. I decide what each para is going to be and what segues to use. An example if I were writing a profile of a person: Para 1: Begin with something the person is doing. Para 2: Introduce the person. Compress it in two sentences. The connect will be to a quote by the subject. Para 3: QUOTE. Connect this to a peer’s quote. And so on. If this seems time-consuming, let me assure you that it is not. Once I write the outline, the actual writing becomes far easier. There is no hesitation in writing, it just flows. And yes, I have a separate notebook for it — a large A4 sized ruled notebook. Why large? That way the entire story outline can fit into one page and I won’t miss anything. I even use it to create a thinking map. This is one of those maps where you have one phrase in the middle and several around it, connecting to it. A thinking map helps you retain the backbone of the piece you’re writing and ensures you include everything that is relevant to it. Open a nice notebook (always a source of joy for me). Map out your story in detail and watch the words flow. — Written by Sruthi Radhakrishnan, who is a writer at emdash, after a 10-year stint in journalism, who obsesses over little details. She can be found @sruthirk on Twitter. Writing