NaNoWriMo Day 29: Writing the Falling Action and Emotional Aftermath

NaNoWriMo Day 29 is part of the NaNoWriMo Mastery Series — a 30–day writing journey from Pages and Prose guiding you from blank page to complete first draft, with emotional depth and narrative clarity.

🖋️ Start from the beginning → NaNoWriMo National Novel Writing Month: How to Write a 50,000-Word Novel in 30 Days

You’ve written your climax — the explosive moment where everything converges.
Now the story begins to settle into stillness again.

Day 29 is about shaping the aftermath:
the falling action — the emotional exhale after the storm.

This is where your story makes meaning out of chaos.


1. The Falling Action Answers: “What Now?”

After the climax, readers need grounding.

The falling action should show:

• what changed
• what remains broken
• what healed
• what shifted inside the protagonist
• what consequences unfolded
• what relationships transformed

This is the beginning of closure.

2. Slow the Pacing Down — Gently

Unlike the climax, the falling action invites stillness.

Use:

• longer sentences
• reflective beats
• quieter scenes
• softened tone
• gentler pacing

Let readers breathe again.

Let you breathe again.


3. Show the Emotional Consequences

The climax isn’t meaningful because of what happened —
it’s meaningful because of what it does to your character.

Show:

• grief
• relief
• realization
• newfound courage
• a broken belief
• a healed wound
• a quiet acceptance

The protagonist is changed — now show how.

4. Resolve (or Intentionally Leave Open) Subplots

Readers want closure.
But not everything needs to be wrapped neatly.

For each subplot ask:

Does this need resolution?
Does it need transformation?
Should it remain unanswered for a sequel?
Is there symbolic closure instead of literal?

Tie up what matters.
Let go of what doesn’t.

5. Redefine Relationships After the Storm

Every major event shifts dynamics.

Show how relationships look now:

• stronger
• broken
• transformed
• repaired
• distanced
• deepened

Relationships echo theme — their resolution gives emotional clarity.


6. Show How the World Has Changed

Even if your novel is character-driven, the world changes too.

Examples:

• a city recovering
• a home transformed
• a job left behind
• a mission completed
• a place revisited with new eyes

Let the environment reflect the emotional shift.


7. Give Your Protagonist One Final Moment of Reflection

This is the quiet truth before the ending.

Write a moment where your protagonist:

• reflects
• accepts
• grieves
• rejoices
• understands
• forgives
• chooses
• softens
• grows

This moment prepares your story for its final note tomorrow.

8. A Simple Writing Exercise for Today

Write a paragraph answering:

  1. What is the immediate consequence of the climax?
  2. What does my protagonist lose?
  3. What do they gain?
  4. What truth do they understand now that they didn’t before?

This paragraph becomes the core of your falling action.


Final Thoughts

The falling action is the bridge between the storm and the ending.
It’s where emotion settles, clarity dawns, and meaning crystallizes.

Today, you’re not building intensity —
you’re shaping resonance.

Let the quiet be powerful.

Let the transformation breathe.

You’re one day away from finishing your novel.

Keep going.
You’re almost home.

Next in the Series

➡️ Day 30: Writing the Ending — Delivering a Final Note That Echoes Forever

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *