Vanadinite - Mibladen Mining District, Midelt, Khénifra Province, Meknès-Tafilalet Region, Morocco
Hello! I have a plan to get my main character injured by the antagonist. But, since the mc lives, is it better to describe the danger or get the mc injured so he (and the audience) would have no questions about the seriousness of the antagonist?
If you ask many writers why they beat their characters up so much, the immediate playful answer might be “Because it’s fun!” but there is (or should be) some strategy involved in when and how you injure your main character. So before I answer the question directly, I’m going to discuss these strategies a little.
Reasons to Injure a Character:
1. To create additional challenges in a high-stakes situation
If a character’s journey has been fairly easy to far, an injury is one way to complicate things. But the only way it works is if the injury lasts long enough to really hinder them.
For instance, if you have a character that has the magical ability to heal others, then a character being injured and then healed two minutes later doesn’t create much of a challenge, nor does it heighten suspense since the character’s life was never truly in danger. So an injury that’s introduced to complicate things should take some time to recover from, and it’s usually more realistic anyway, especially when you consider the tortuous stuff we do to our MCs sometimes.
However, if you do have a healer character, and they’re currently separated from the character you injure, then a challenge is immediately presented. The injured character has to continue their journey through the injury, to either reach their destination or be reunited with the healer that can help them.
2. To foreshadow a future situation
The situation I described above, where a character is injured and then healed two minutes later, could work, if it’s being used to foreshadow the second situation I described, where the two characters are separated. Showing the healer in action early in the story can foreshadow a later complication when the healer is unable to assist their companion, whether it’s due to a separation or a sudden loss of powers.
It can also work as exposition to show the way the healer’s power works.
3. To show the antagonist’s maliciousness
The anon above suggested they injure their character to show the antagonist means business, and that definitely qualifies as a good reason to injure a character.
See, when an antagonist hurts a character - and not just an MC, but anyone - they show that they don’t care who gets in their way. They want what they want, and in their opinion, the ends justifies the means. Even when a character isn’t necessarily in their way, and they do it for pleasure, it tells a reader a great deal about the antagonist’s psyche, and how far they’ll go to further their own agenda.
My only caution here is to be wary of how often you’re using this reason. Often times it becomes easy to justify an antagonist’s plan by saying “They’re evil and they enjoy torturing people.” But villains who are evil just for the pure enjoyment of it grow uninteresting and predictable quickly. So despite the pleasure they get out of hurting people, they must have some greater scheme in front of them. Some ultimate gain that they’re hoping to achieve. A combination of these two things can breed a fascinating antagonist.
4. To deepen a character bond or relationship
Injuries or illness are great opportunities to write a dynamic where one character is taking care of another, showing how close the two characters are, and how attentively they’ll care for the other. But this dynamic is most compelling when it’s a reversal, such as a little brother taking care of an older one, or when someone who the protagonist has built up to be invincible is suddenly sidelined and needs the protagonist’s help.
Like the previous reason, i would just be careful how frequently this occurs. Situations like these are more effective when they’re big, and they last long term, rather than several smaller instances where a character keeps getting hurt and cared for.
There may be other reasons out there to justify injuring a character that I haven’t thought of here, but I can surely tell you one reason not to:
Avoid injuring a character purely for the fun of it.
Now listen, what you do in your own private writing universe is your own business, and if you want to put your characters through hell because it’s fun, I commend you for finding so much joy in the process of writing and I encourage you to keep at it. But when it comes to finding an audience, and telling a cohesive, well-paced, well-plotted story, you gotta start considering each move you make as a writer, and ask yourself if each plot point needs to be there.
Now that I’ve gone into all this detail, let me get back to the specific question that the anon asked. Since the character ultimately lives, is it better to just show the possible danger, or to actually have the antagonist injure them to show they’re serious?
My answer to you would be that you could injure the character, since your reasoning falls within the reasons I listed here (reason #3), and it would be even better if it qualified for two reasons, such as delaying their progress to achieve their goal (reason #1) or repairing a strained relationship when a companion must take care of them (reason #4).
Your argument that the character lives (so why bother?) ignores the need for conflict in a story. Readers appreciate conflict, as long as there are logical reasons for it, and if you consider these reasons I discussed, you should be in great shape.
However, I think that you could show your antagonist’s malicious intentions without injuring the character, if you felt the injury would be too much for an already conflict-heavy plot. The antagonist might show anger/violence towards the people working for them (out of frustration), or even to innocent bystanders, or other minor characters whose fates we’re not as tied up in. So I think there are still options for you if you wanted to avoid an injury.
-Rebekah
A couple people asked me how I vary my leaves and trees and honestly, it’s super easy! I’ve never made a tutorial/guide before so I kept this mega simple but I hope someone out there might find it useful at least!
Also, anyone can download the brushes I use for all my art on my tumblr page (: I only use around 5 so go nuts haha
Me? I’ve had so many names. Old names that only the wind and the trees can pronounce.
For whatever reason you’re here, knowing survival skills can save your life or your character’s life (especially for those writers out there that are researching this topic).
Basic Rules If You Are Lost And Alone In The Wilderness
Basic Wilderness Survival Skills
Celestial Navigation & Land Navigation - Navigation without a Compass
Finding True North Without a Compass
Telling Time Without A Clock: Scandinavian Daymarks
Wilderness Survival - Field-Expedient Direction Finding
Wilderness Survival - Contact With People
Wilderness Survival - Clouds: Foretellers Of Weather
Wilderness Survival - Camouflage
Wilderness Survival - Sea Survival
Wilderness Survival - Cold Weather Survival
Wilderness Survival - Tropical Survival
Wilderness Survival - Desert Survival
Wilderness Survival - Field-Expedient Weapons, Tools, And Equipment
Wilderness Survival - Psychology of Survival
Wilderness Survival - Signaling Techniques
Morse Code
The Survivalist - Survival Gear: Make Your Own Signal Whistle
The Survivalist - Survival Skills: Signal Whistle Codes
The Survivalist - Survival Gear: How To Make A Compass
The Survivalist - Survival Skills: Folk Wisdom Weather Predictors
The Survivalist - How To Make Rope From Natural Fibers
The Survivalist - Tying Knots That Work
The Survivalist - More Knots That Work
The Survivalist - How To Make Your Own Tick And Bug Repellent
The Survivalist - How To Make A Toothbrush In The Field
The Survivalist - Insulate You Clothes To Survive The Cold
The Survivalist - Survival Skills: Find Natural Toilet Paper
Going To The Bathroom In The Woods 101
How To Go In The Woods
Plants That Repel Mosquitoes
One Green Planet - DIY Natural Insect Repellent
Preventing Bug Bites In The Woods
Homemade Natural Bug Spray Recipes
Bushcraft Camp Hygiene
Wilderness Hygiene
Preparing For Your First Year Trip — Wilderness Living
Camping and Cramping: How To Handle Your Period While You Enjoy The Great Outdoors
Hiking While Menstruating?
What Did Women Use For Menstruation In Europe and America From 1700 - 1900, And Probably Earlier?
Menstruation, Menstrual Hygiene and Woman’s Health in Ancient Egypt
Survival: Animal Attacks
How to Survive Wild Animal Attacks
Agents of Virtue. Each agent is paired with an angel representing a virtue that helps them fulfill a specific role within their squad. Noble in their purpose and swift in their dealing of justice they maintain the balance between worlds.
1:Kindness, Powerful but frail magic user.
2: Humility. Stealth infiltrator/flanker
3: Charity. Support healer.
4: Chastity. CQC specialist.
5:Temperance. Strategists able to fill multiple roles.
6: Patience. DMR trapper/zone controller.
7: Diligence. Heavy support tank.
Skeletal Galena - 9th Septemvri mine (Deveti Septemvri mine), Madan ore field, Rhodope Mts, Smolyan Oblast, Bulgaria