You sat down to revise. Two hours later, you have changed seven commas and an entire act, and you cannot remember why.
The misdiagnosisThe misdiagnosis is that you are bad at revision.
The real diagnosisYou are not bad at revision. You are doing three passes at once. Structural, scene, line. Each pass uses a different brain. Combine them and they fight. Separate them and the draft shapes up.
The Three Passes
| Pass | Brain Used | What It Does |
|---|---|---|
| Structural | Architect | Beat sheet. Act breaks. Stakes. |
| Scene | Director | Goals, conflict, exits, openings. |
| Line | Editor | Word, rhythm, redundancy. |
Three Rules For The Passes
- Structural first. Always.
- No line edits during a structural pass.
- Line edits last. Otherwise you polish lines you'll cut.
Polishing a sentence in a scene you'll later delete is not revision. It is decoration on a wall about to be knocked down.
Mark the passes on three separate read-throughs. One pass per read. Don’t peek across.
The dare (not assignment)Pick your draft. Decide which pass it's actually in. Do that pass and only that pass for two weeks.
Image promptA manuscript labeled in three colored tabs — purple, pink, sea-green — lying on a desk. Painterly. Cream background. No people.
— The Book Maven
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