Every Scene Needs a Coin Flip

Painterly illustration of a golden coin balanced on its edge between a sunlit meadow and a twilight forest, symbolizing scene polarity

Every scene in your novel starts somewhere emotionally and ends somewhere else. If it starts and ends in the same place, nothing happened.

Sounds obvious. It isn’t. I recently reread a draft where the protagonist spent three consecutive chapters winning—she solved the puzzle, charmed the ally, found the clue. Each scene was competent. Each one was boring.

The problem was polarity. Every scene entered positive and exited positive. No reversal. Flatline is flatline whether it’s high or low.

Think of it as a coin flip. Your character walks in holding the coin heads-up—confident, hopeful, in control. By the time she walks out, it should be tails. The flip is the scene’s reason for existing.

This works at every scale. A thriller scene flips from “safe” to “hunted.” A quiet literary scene flips from “self-assured” to “doubting.” The magnitude doesn’t matter. The change does.

Here’s the exercise: Open your manuscript. For every scene, write two words: the emotional state at entrance and exit. “Hopeful / betrayed.” “Confident / humiliated.” Now look at the sequence. Three consecutive scenes ending on the same polarity? Those are your revision targets. Flip at least one coin.


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