I’m about 30,000 words into a fantasy novel draft, and I’ve hit a major snag. My protagonist started with a clear goal, but as I’ve written, she’s become kind of passive, just reacting to events instead of driving the story. I found a detailed Character arc template online that maps out the transformation from a flaw to a new truth, and it seems logical. But when I try to fit my messy, half-formed character into those neat boxes, it feels forced, like I’m retrofitting a personality onto a formula. I’m unsure if I should stick with this structured approach to fix her, or just keep writing and hope her voice emerges more naturally through the scenes. It’s making me second-guess my whole process.
Nice project. A template can be a scaffold; treat the character arc as a guide to sharpen agency, not a jail cell. Use it to surface the core stakes and what your protagonist is trying to prove to herself, then let scenes reveal how she handles pressure.
I get the instinct to resist a formula. The danger is letting a neat arc erase the messy, real voice. If it starts feeling forced, drop the boxes and focus on a few strong asks in each scene—what she wants, what she fears, and what she’s willing to risk.
Here's a low-friction approach: write a tiny 5-chapter beat sheet that maps one clear goal per act and a single consequence if she fails. It isn’t binding; it’s a compass you can bend as you write.
Personally, I’ve had better luck when I let the scene decide the arc. If a moment heightens her choice under pressure, I note it and let the overall arc emerge—not the other way around.
Consider using the arc as a flexible lens, not a rigid blueprint. Start with her current flaw or need, sketch a rough 'new truth,' but permit detours as you discover her voice.
If you’re stuck, try writing a single scene where she makes a costly choice, then backtrack the logic to see how it should ripple into later chapters.
Would a tiny, no-pressure worksheet help you test the idea without losing momentum?