I’ve been trying to write a short story based on a vivid dream I had, but I keep getting stuck because the logic of dreams just falls apart on the page. How do you translate that feeling of a seamless, shifting narrative without it becoming a confusing mess for a reader?
Dreams feel like a river with no banks. The moment you pin it down the current changes. Use a consistent sensory mode like smell color or temperature as your compass even when logic wanders. Dream logic can become a map if you anchor transitions to a motif not a cause.
Think of a throughline, a single object or location that returns, letting you layer meaning as the dream shifts. Treat the shifts as metamorphoses of tone rather than leaps of plot. Use shorter sentences during rapid changes and longer ones when the scene settles. Keep reader orientation with signposts.
So you want the dream to behave like a detective novel It will not Maybe lean into misunderstanding Let the narrator misinterpret strange events and reveal the gap between belief and reality What would it change to treat the dream as a mood rather than a case?
Some readers will push back on the idea that dream logic should be fixed If the dream feels slippery you can treat it as mood space not argument Let ambiguity live a little in the scene while the character acts.
Reframe the issue focus on how the dream shifts waking life needs Let dream events act as emotional catalysts for change not as plot weapons Show how the dream unsettles a routine choice rather than explaining the dream.
Craft tip use line breaks and rhythm as doors Let a quick cut signal a shift in the dream world and let long breathy sentences linger on remembered color The reader will follow by feeling rather than following every cause.
Dream logic can be a language the writer learns to translate into scene and image The goal is not to prove a rule but to invite a reader to feel the next step.