《Wattpad 101: Your guide to the world of Wattpad》The Dream Sequence
Advertisement
Among many groups of authors, there seems to be this weird fascination with dream sequences. Perhaps a lot of writers got their start writing by creating a journal where they jot down their dreams. Perhaps a lot of authors favorite stories often contained dream sequences themselves. One of my favorite series, for example, called Wheel of Time, is so fascinated with dream sequences that later novels actually turned the dreams into an actual world, where a large portion of the story, characters, and battles actually took place. There were entire plotlines dedicated to it.
Few people seem to be able to get through a fantasy without creating some kind of dream sequence. Either some prophet has a dream, such as the prophecy of the coming of a great hero, or someone suddenly has bad dreams convinced something bad is coming. If, as a writer, you really have your crap together, you might even have a dream full of symbolism that flat out explains your entire story. Like Shaun of the Dead's bar scene, you lay out the entire plot of the story in a single chapter, even though that plot won't make a lick of sense to your readers at the moment.
In my last chapter, I was discussing a concept called reader's fatigue. In it, I used dreams as an example of something that often comes off as exhausting to readers. This is because dreams, in very nature, are a bit nonsensical. Even when they pertain to a person's psyche or personality, they can be a very long-winded and roundabout way to say something about somebody. I've mentioned in the past that the longer you take to say something, the more likely you are to bore your audience. Well, dreams happen to be a way of achieving a typically small goal in the maximum number of words possible. Not only do dreams take a really long time to say something, what they actually say is very hard to figure out and subject to interpretation.
Part of that is because most people reading your book do not understand your intent. Dreams can have a lot of different purposes. In Wheel of Time, they were an actual place where your enemies could show up and even touch you. However, in most stories, they could be trying to do characterization, or they could be trying to show the future, or they could be trying to show character development, they could be trying to give you an emotional moment, or they could just be there to fill up words.
Advertisement
Part of me feels the last option is the reason a lot of people lean on dream sequences. It gets an extra chapter out of the story without actually having to progress the plot a lick. But that's a problem too. When the plot isn't progressing, then the people reading the story have no reason to be reading it. And when we don't know what your intention is with a dream sequence, whether it's to help you understand the MC a little better or to help foreshadow what's to come, it's something shrouded in vagueness that is very difficult to cope with.
I think the most common use for dreams seems to be the foreshadowing part. This is kind of a problem, because it's freaking ridiculous when you think about it. Basically, whether you're writing a fantasy story, or a romance... you're giving the character who has the dream a superpower. That might work in the fantasy setting, but when you're writing a story with realife people, it's kind of silly when you think about it. If your character is having dreams that reveal plot points in the future, then basically you're writing a character who can see into the future.
Now, I'm sure there are some authors out there who actually believe in real life psychics and are convinced that there are tons of prescient people out there who just don't realize it, but for the rest of us, this is kind of a silly thing to give a character in your story, isn't it? Because when it's put in a story, it's not just a chance occurrence, it truly is prescience being provided by you, the author and ultimate god of your story. We typically like to believe as readers that as an author your only writing the parts that are important for us to know, and wouldn't be making use read things that aren't relevant to the plot. So when we read a dream sequence, we're already been told it's important because you're taking time to detail it, where "I had weird dreams last night" could have just as easily fulfilled the role.
And I truly do hope your dreams contain symbolism and foreshadowing, because the alternative is that they don't. In which case, why the hell did I just waste ten minutes reading through a dream that will ultimately not affect the story in the slightest? When you put a dream in to your story, either you're giving your MC an inexplicable superpower, or you're just wasting everyone's time.
Advertisement
One of the most fundamental issues with the "psychic dream", is that it's far more interesting for the writer than the reader. You see, what you as a writer forgets when you write this scene is that your reader hasn't read the rest of the book yet. To you, it's clever symbolism, but to your reader, it's literally meaningless. It's telling the future of the story, but without any context. If your story turns out to be super popular, and commonly gets read and reread, this might not be a bad thing, but when it comes down to most readers who will only read through a story once, this sort of vague foreshadowing will never stick. They won't remember it when it comes up in the story. They might as well be reading garbage for all the good it will do them later on.
Now, there is always the fakeout dreams. Something embarrassing happens, or if it's a horror, something scary. Watching character suddenly act out of character or reading fearfully as your favorite character is mauled by the serial killer, only to go... oops, it was a dreams all along! Psych! When dreams are used this way, they feel like a bad joke. They're there to illicit a cheap emotional reaction requiring a long set up, with usually a very quick and solitary payoff. Since "it was all a dream", they add nothing to a story. They sacrifice plot for a quick and cheap emotional scene. In essence, they are to stories like the jumpscare games are to video game horror. Cheap, easy, and without substance.
So, giving what I just said about dreams, you probably are thinking that I'm against dreams. Following the line, this would normally be the point where I explain why I don't think dreams are shit and why they also have their place in stories, but I'm actually having trouble coming up with any good reasons. So yeah, I guess I'm kind of against dreams here.
Like prologues, dream sequences are just something way overused in literature. They add little to a story except word count. Okay, I've sometimes seen them used for pacing. If you have a big scene, and you want your reader to wind down for a bit yet can't come up with a better way that fits into the plot, tossing in a dream sequence gets a mellow 2000 words of minutia to spread apart your last plot important scene over to your next plot important scene, giving the reader time to digest the important parts.
However, I really can't see this as a good thing. Dream sequences are lazy foreshadowing, lazy pacing tools, and lazy ways to increase word counts! As far as providing insight into the main character, I'd like to think you managed to do that throughout the entire story, what with you following their PoV and all.
There are places and reasons for dreams. Wheel of Time wouldn't have been the novel it was without the World of Dreams, and I'm sure there are some novels that have benefited from this overused cliché. However, the next time you feel the need to drop a dream sequence, please think about why you feel you need it. Did you want to drop some foreshadowing? I bet there are better ways to do it. Did you want to show readers the characters feelings? Still, better ways to do it. To pace out a scene? I'm telling you, there are better ways!
You may have read a dream sequence you just loved. You may have every intention of continuing to use them yourself. However, to repeat my mantra for this book, there should always be a reason behind it. Once you can come up with the reason and be able to argue for its right to exist, then you can start using it. Before that, you might want to step back on the dreams a bit. They induce reader's fatigue and can cause you to lose readers, especially when shoved into your story early on.
Advertisement
- In Serial10 Chapters
Hybrid Summoner
All his life it seemed like the gods condemed his existence. One thing led to another in an endless spiral that would break nearly anyone, and yet it only taught him one thing. The strong make the rules and the weak get eaten by them. He never wanted power, fame, or glory. He wanted a happy life with a family that loved him and he finally thought he could get it. Until she slept with his best friend hours after his parents funeral. It took years to peice himself together again but he did it and just so the gods could get the last laugh and end the world. Now thrown into a world straight out of some fantasy VRMMORPG like he read about online the skills he created to combat depression will now combat monsters straight out of a story book. Follow Niko Bolas as he crawls through a world overflowing with monsters- and not the human kind either. Watch as he turns all the pain of his life into a strength that will make the world itself tremble. This is the journey of a man that finally is where he was always meant to be. Even it that is at the end of a world and the begining of another. Quick shout out to Deviant art cause they make so much awsome artwork. The cover is theirs and i just used it cause it felt in tune with the MC. Oh and this my first book so i'd appreciate some good solid constructive criticism, ENJOY.
8 60 - In Serial42 Chapters
The Gate of Shadows
Society views witches as abominations, and as such, treats them that way. While on an errand for her coven, Lilith spies on a young Lycan boy playing with his friends, wistful for the life she could have had. In a twist of fate, she encounters him again, and a relationship blossoms between them. But in a world that wants nothing to do with witches, will their relationship survive the stigma? Notes: This is my first story. I hope you enjoy it! I welcome any feedback! The story is 232,639 words in total. *Not a short story by any means.* ~Currently editing chapters for better quality~Working on chapters 22-24 currently for quality- Will get to them eventually~ -Story is completed- Sequel Available-
8 439 - In Serial6 Chapters
The Trickster Priest
As the new VRMMO World of Damakar by Beyond Illusions was closing in on full release, Led had still not touched it since beta-keys were extremely hard to get by. This all changed, however when the most popular kid in his school suddenly invited him to be their healer.Sniffing a catch from far away, Led still agrees to join them considering he gets the VRMMO equipment for free, in exchange for him being their healer. But what kind of healer you ask?The Trickster Priest.Join Led as he tackles the new world of VRMMO, World of Damakar, with his not so run-of-the-mill. Can he and his analyzing nature cope with this very unreliably class?
8 122 - In Serial49 Chapters
New to Magic
A science-fantasy story about a nine-year-old girl who doesn't quite fit in. She's too slow, too smart and too shy. She dreams of magic that she doesn't know exist. One day her life changes and she becomes an OP character. The story follows the young girl through her childhood until shs's a young adult. P.S I'm not a great writer and I make lots of mistakes. But I love to make up stories and want to share some. Please forgive any mistake and any advice is welcome. Right now I have 400,000 words written but not edited. Any help with editing will be welcome. Most of all enjoy or find another story you will. Thank you. There is some gore and Traumatising content but not much of either
8 61 - In Serial19 Chapters
A Study In Marriage (Johnlock) - Sequel to A Study in Love
Once the rings have been exchanged and the vows have been said, Sherlock and John are ready to settle down and get their fill of the domestic bliss that so often comes with marriage. Unfortunately, nothing is ever that simple for them... and they know the honeymoon period can't last forever. They'd promised each other "for better or for worse", but John had no idea just how bad 'worse' could be.
8 210 - In Serial62 Chapters
BL | I Am The Most Red In The World [Quick Wear]
⚠MACHINE TRANSLATIONTitleI Am The Most Red In The World [Quick Wear]/全世界我最紅[快穿]AuthorShiseer/澀澀兒Status62 Chapters (Completed)https://m.shubaow.net/159/159988/.INTRODUCTIONThe end of the world is coming, superstar Chu Yunyan is kind and gentle, has a powerful system and an equally powerful lover, so he saves countless people and becomes the savior of the last days.Until he was betrayed because of his kindness, and his lover lost his soul for him, leaving only one body.Chu Yunyan finally turned black.In order to collect the soul of his lover and get a chance for revenge, with the help of the system, Chu Yunyan began to travel through various worlds, replacing the original owner who was betrayed like him, avenging those who betrayed the original owner, and became the most popular person in every world. Collect beliefs and rediscover the soul of your lover!
8 130

