I have a lot of respect for people who can focus on and write just one story at a time. Tons and tons. There are days I’m envious of your dedication to the single tale.

I’m not one of those people. If I get stuck on something – either I can’t figure out how to fix it, or I’m waiting for feedback – I have to work on something else. Sometimes I can just go to a different chapter in the same novel, but frequently I just pull up a different novel. I try and limit myself to two at a time, though.

The problem comes when I’m really, really stuck on the story I should be working on, so I neglect in favor of the other tale. And then I start to wonder if that means I don’t love the old story enough. And then I slide into “If I just deleted this, and that, and that over there…”

I tend to walk away when I start thinking that deleting things is the only answer. Because…I don’t want to delete everything.

Which is where I’m stuck right now. I have a couple of issues with one of my stories that aren’t like vast, sweeping things. They don’t require me to rewrite large portions of the book. In fact, they really only need some tweaks here and there. But I can’t wrap my brain around them, so I keep avoiding them and going back to the story I know the answers to. The one that doesn’t require world-building and in which the entire plot doesn’t rest on being able to explain two or three individual points clearly.

I mean, technically it does. But it’s a lot easier to explain “Riley wants more than a one night stand, Zane doesn’t.” Than it is to explain “Kali and Aurael share a body, because Aurael is an angel that was created three hundred years ago to destroy gods and she’s not very good at her job and now there’s this ring that Vulcan created and the entire effect is like this whole multiple personality thing and the only reason it even happened is because there’s this spear, and Lucifer needs to get his hands on it but doesn’t have the most clear road map on how to do so, because mapquest was down that day…”

See the difference? (And yeah, that second bit is meant to be confusing. Here at least. It would be really nice if it made more sense in my story, but it doesn’t yet).

So part of me really wants to just delete this character, rather than try and figure out how to explain her. But the reason she’s in the story is because she’s basically foreshadowing for 75% of what happens in the next 300 pages.

What do you do when you try and over and over again to explain something in your writing and still can’t nail the details?