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65-06 Do or Do Not. There is No Try

Janice Hardy

Clarifying What Your Characters Do

The word “try” can send all the wrong signals to your reader.Characters “try to” do a lot of things in stories. They try to get up, they try to hide, they try to hold back tears. But what the writer really means, is the character got up, they hid behind the couch and were found anyway, or they blinked back tears welling in their eyes.The “try” isn’t describing the action, it’s describing the motive, which is another form of telling, not showing. The trying weakens the writing, and isn’t putting enough of what’s actually happening on the page for readers to understand the action.Not that “trying to” act is a bad thing. If the motive is more important than the action, “trying” works just fine and conveys what the author wants readers to know. But more often than not, “trying” is unclear, and readers are left wondering if the character accomplished what they tried to do or not.

 

Strengthen your writing by stating exactly what your character is doing—not “trying to” do.You don’t need to cut every instance of “tried” from your manuscript, but consider each one and decide if your character really is trying, or are they doing.For example:

He tried to stand, grabbing the chair and dragging himself upright.

“Tried to” here suggests failure. He “tried to” stand, but didn’t. But at the end of this sentence, the guy is standing. He didn't try, he did. If we cut the “tried to” we get:

He grabbed the chair and dragged himself upright.

This describes the action, and it uses stronger verbs and a more active voice. If you’re trimming down a novel, that’s also four words gone, so it’s a handy tool for reducing your word count.Let’s look at another:

They tried to sneak into the boss’s office.

Did they succeed or not? It’s unclear, and you can almost hear the "but they got caught" at the end of it. The “tried to” implies that they failed. So what actually happened?Are they lingering outside the door, glancing down the hallway, licking their lips and rubbing their sweaty palms on their pants? Did they reach for the door and someone asks what they’re doing?Or did they just look around, open the door, and enter? Was there no “trying” at all? If so, the “try” isn’t necessary, and robs you of a fun little opportunity to create tension.Here’s one writers use all the time:

She tried to smile.

What does the “tried to” mean here? It's ambiguous, because we only know the intent, not the actual outcome of this action. Is she standing there with a weird look on her face? Is she not smiling at all?

 

Instead, we might write:

·                  She tried to smile, but her lips stayed flat.

·                  She flashed a fake grin that wasn’t fooling anybody.

·                  She ought to smile.

·                  The corners of her mouth twitched. Hey, she tried.

·                  Nothing would make her smile today.

It’s a small line, and no one is going to cast your novel across the room in disgust if you write it, but it’s yet another an opportunity for stronger writing. And it doesn’t take a lot of missed opportunities to turn a novel from good to meh. Or push a good novel to great.

 

The intent of the sentence is key when deciding if “tried to” works or not.If the emotion associated with “trying” is more important, “trying to” can work. Here’s an example from my own novel, The Shifter:

I tried not to squirm, tried not to think about the soldier's hands.

Is she squirming or not? You can't tell. She’s obviously thinking about the soldier's hands since she mentioned them but she could be squirming, or standing still, or twitching a little. 

My intent was to indicate the personal struggle for my protagonist, Nya. Whether or not she did squirm or think isn’t as important as her intent to ignore what the solider is doing (and for the record, he’s just searching her). Her emotional response is what I wanted to convey. I wanted to suggest failure, but also discomfort and fear. “I tried not to squirm as the solider searched me” doesn’t have the same emotional resonance that “I tried not to squirm, tried not to think about the soldier's hands” does.

Check your writing for weak “tried to” phrases. Ask:Is the person doing what they're “trying to” do or not? If there’s no “trying” at all, just show the action.Is the intent to show the struggle or the failure? If the emotional response is more important, make sure that comes through in the writing. Odds are the internal thoughts or narrative connected to the “tried to” will support this (as in my squiring example).Are you showing an action or a motivation? If it’s the intent to act, you could be telling.What is the character actually doing? If fleshing out the action makes it more interesting, showing what the character does will likely improve the writing.Are you using it to describe action or as a colloquialism? We use plenty of words that are meant to be conversational, and “tried” is one of them. “She was trying to be nice, but come on” works because it’s not description, it’s an internal thought.Rethinking “tried” is just one more way you can tighten your prose. You'll say what you actually mean instead of using a vague description that could be read a few different ways. It'll also help pinpoint potentially told areas and give you opportunities to improve the writing.It was good advice for Luke Skywalker, and it's good advice for writers.EXERCISE FOR YOU: Take five minutes and examine places in your manuscript where you used “tried to.” Consider the intent behind the “trying,” and revise any weak “tried to” phrases.How do you feel about tried? Are you using it to show a struggle or failure, or as a setup to the actual action?

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