Writers--Plotters or Pantsers

I am a pantser--I sit at my computer and "write by the seat of my pants" and a story comes out.

Plotters, on the other hand, plan their story before they start writing.

This often depends upon whether they are right or left brain dominant. Most of us have seen this dancing woman who spins.

Spinning dancer

If she spins clockwise, you are using your right brain, and if she spins in an anti-clockwise direction you're using your left brain.

If you're quite evenly right and left brained, you should be able to change the direction she is spinning while you stare at the moving image.

Plotters are usually predominately left-brained. They use the left side of their brain more than the right side. The left side of your brain is the one that controls logic and order. If you are predominantly left brained you probably like your life to be orderly, are good at math, regularly make and follow to-do lists, are punctual to appointments. You get the picture. Left brained people are more likely to create a detailed plot plan before writing, whether it is fiction or not. They are also more likely to write plot driven stories, where the action dictates what happens to the characters.

Pantsers write by "the seat of their pants". They are more right-brained. They are creative, passionate, emotional, and can be messy and disorganized. They are more in touch with their senses, and their writing includes touch, taste, and feel. Pantsers keep their stories in their heads and sit down and type them without planning. They may even rebel against writing down the plot and creating a plan. Pantsers are more likely to write character-driven stories, where the emotions of the characters determine what happens.
7 likes ·   •  20 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 03, 2012 11:31 Tags: left-brain, pantser, plotter, right-brain
Comments Showing 1-20 of 20 (20 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

message 1: by Jeff (new)

Jeff Dawson Hm, I'm caught in the middle, again.


message 2: by Mona (new)

Mona Karel Both ways for me. Sigh. Yep, corn-fused


message 3: by Trish (new)

Trish Jackson Hey, Adrienne. There are nay-sayers to everything!! I actually just recently tried to plot my next novel, for the first time ever, and when I was writing yesterday, a fiancee I had never heard of suddenly appeared on my pages!! I must be doomed to be a pantser. It proves my theory that Not only do writers hear voices—they are cracked enough to write them down!


message 4: by Pender (new)

Pender Huh. I see clockwise first, but if I concentrate I can make her spin counter-clockwise. Maybe that explains why my carefully constructed plots always take an unexpected detour or two.


message 5: by Trish (new)

Trish Jackson Exactly my thoughts!!


message 6: by Vicki (new)

Vicki Batman I looked and see clockwise, but then counter. Am I both? Interesting.


message 7: by Voirey (new)

Voirey Linger I'm apparently an oddball... right-brained plotter.


message 8: by Janice (new)

Janice Seagraves She moves clockwise but if I concentrate then she goes counter-clockwise. BY the way, I'm a panster, but I also make lists but not for my writing.

Janice~


message 9: by Trish (new)

Trish Jackson I'm with you, Janice. The test isn't showing up here but you can take it on my blog to find out which side of your brain you use the most and the ration of left to right. http://romanticreviewramble.blogspot....


message 10: by Janice (new)

Janice Seagraves I did the test on your blog and apparently my right and left brain is evenly balanced.

Janice~


message 11: by Trish (new)

Trish Jackson Then what you said makes a lot of sense.


message 12: by Janice (new)

Janice Seagraves Yay, I make sense.


message 13: by Seleste (new)

Seleste deLaney I'm split. With the quiz I was 9 & 10 :P


message 14: by Lynne (new)

Lynne James Mine is only clockwise. No matter how hard I try, she stays clockwise. So I guess the fact that I've always been a pantser right on for me. :)


message 15: by Ford (new)

Ford Forkum I struggled to change from clockwise. I focused my attention on the legs in two dimensions until there was no spinning, just expanding and contracting, then I could shift my perception to counter-clockwise.

I'm a total pantser.


message 16: by Kathryn (new)

Kathryn Blake I really enjoyed this. Most tests I've taken have showed I'm evenly left and right brained, but I had to struggle to see her spin counter-clockwise. I managed to do it, but it took a minute. I do plot out my books, but I'm definitely a pantser when it comes to actually writing the first draft. So, even though I always thought I was a plotter, I guess I'm really a pantser at heart. Thanks for sharing.


message 17: by Evie (last edited Nov 07, 2012 09:28PM) (new)

Evie Jayne staunchly right brained. Frustrating. Sometimes I wish I had some kind of plot path to follow. Even when I try my characters end up doing something different anyway. Sigh.


message 18: by M.S. (new)

M.S. Spencer As expected she spins clockwise for me EXCEPT when I move farther away from the screen and count to four. As I experimented with distance and counting she began to spin erratically, changing direction a lot. When I sat and thought about it she went counter-clockwise. I notice most commenters started with clockwise--I wonder if that's because since we're all writers, the creativity aspect is paramount no matter what the other parameters of personality are?


message 19: by Doris (new)

Doris Just as I thought, as I can't plot to save my life, lol. She only spins clockwise for me.


message 20: by M.S. (new)

M.S. Spencer Even more fascinating--I had my daughter (an artist) sit next to me--she saw her going counterclockwise at the same time that I saw her go clockwise.


back to top