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Want vs. Need: The Engine of Character

A five-week course on the difference that runs every great character arc.
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Course Overview

Overview

Every great character arc runs on the same engine: Want vs. Need. The character pursues what she thinks she wants. The story reveals what she actually needs. The gap between them is where every arc lives. Five weeks of installing Want and Need on every important character in your draft, then designing the arcs that close (or fail to close) the gap. By the end your characters move on purpose, change for reasons, and refuse the easy fix in ways that feel earned. Twenty-five lessons. Bring a draft with multiple important characters. Leave with arcs.

What’s inside

  • 5 modules, 25 lessons + arc templates — engine-focused, arc-design oriented
  • Mindset Maven Test that names YOUR specific arc-collapse pattern (you have one)
  • 5 guided meditations averaging 10 minutes — paired to per-character arc design
  • Toolkit: the Want-vs-Need Engine Worksheet + the Arc Design Templates (per character)
  • Lifetime access, unlimited retakes — every new draft needs arc design
  • Companion blog post per module — public, perfect for the writer whose characters don’t quite change

Who this is for

  • The novelist whose protagonist arrives at the same place she started, in a slightly different outfit
  • The screenwriter whose third-act change feels mechanical rather than earned
  • The playwright whose characters resolve in ways that satisfy the plot but not the audience
  • The memoirist whose memoir voice doesn’t quite show how she actually became different

FAQs

Is Want vs. Need really the engine of every arc?
Yes. Different traditions use different language (desire vs. lack, surface goal vs. deeper goal, etc.) but the structural mechanism is the same. We use Want and Need as the cleanest install language.

Can a character’s Want and Need be the same thing?
Rarely. When they are, the character doesn’t have an arc — she has an arc of overcoming external obstacles. Some genres tolerate this (pure action, certain procedurals); most don’t.

What if my character refuses to change?
Refusal-arcs are real — a character refusing the Need is still an arc. We cover refusal explicitly in module 4.

How is this different from BM-145?
BM-145 covers all five character elements (Want, Need, Contradiction, Voice, Action Under Pressure) at install level. BM-146 goes deeper on the Want/Need engine and ARC design specifically. Pair them for full character depth.

Will this work for ensemble casts?
Yes — module 3 covers per-character arc design in ensembles, including arcs that intersect and counterpoint.

Can I retake?
Yes. Unlimited. Every new project benefits from a fresh arc design pass.

What one student said

★★★★★

“My MFA workshop spent a year on character interiority and never gave me the want-vs-need framework as a teachable install. This course did it in week 2. By week 4 I’d rebuilt my protagonist around it, and by week 8 my agent had the revised manuscript out. Sold three weeks ago. The Book Maven is in my acknowledgments. The course is what my MFA should have included.”

— Lior B., debut novelist (book sold during course)

Curriculum

  • 5 Sections
  • 20 Lessons
  • Lifetime
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Instructor

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L. A. Walton

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36 Courses