Give me your thoughts about my take on tension building. And please teach me your way of doing it.

TheNovelist2000

Really Experienced
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I’ve analyzed three good-performing stories to figure out how each author approached the climax. My goal is to re-formulate them so they start strong, stay strong, and carry that strength all the way until the climax arrives. This isn’t an attempt to turn a slow-burn into a stroker, nor am I advocating strokers over slow burns. This is for writers who want to write strokers but end up producing long, novel-like pieces with very little arousal payoff. All I want to do here is refine the art of starting strong, staying strong, and carrying strong until the climax.

But first, let’s define some terms:

The climax

This is the part of the story the author has promised. It’s the premise. The punchline. The moment when long jumpers finally soar and their feet leave the ground. It doesn’t always have to be sex; it can be flirting, foreplay, or anything overtly sexual. For example, if the premise is a stepdaughter sleeping with her father, the climax begins when they cross into sexual territory—dirty talk, fondling, or intercourse. It’s not the background info, day-to-day interactions, or vague, unacknowledged attraction.

The runway

This is the lead-up to the climax. The build-up to the punchline. The part where long jumpers run before their takeoff. And not every author handles it the same way.

Reminder: Each story I’m analyzing is good on its own. Whichever way the author approaches the climax, the story itself works. What I’m focusing on here is only how they guide the reader to the climax—the runway. And in my opinion, some authors do this part better than others. That’s the art we need to master.

Story 1:

We Cucked Him With His Coworkers (Imstillfun)

Premise: The wife and daughter cuck the husband with his coworkers. Realistically, the women might not act together, so the true premise is sexual interaction between either the wife or daughter and the husband’s coworkers.

Events before reaching the premise:
  1. The wife brings papers to the husband’s office.
  2. Explanation of his work and their marriage.
  3. Four short paragraphs about how they had their daughter when the wife was 18, their temporary separation, and reunion.
  4. Cut back to the office; wife describes the coworkers.
  5. Short interaction between husband, wife, and coworkers before she’s invited for a drink.
  6. At a BBQ: subtle flirting implied but not shown in dialogue.
  7. Back home: wife and husband interact with daughter—she’s curious but nothing sexual.
  8. Vanilla teasing about the coworkers (still not sexually charged).
  9. Husband is invited to a strip club. Wife gets curious, he decides to bring her.
  10. Flirting about strip clubs, discussion of sex life, bedroom sex, wife distracted thinking about coworkers—but still no direct mention of extramarital sex.
  11. Daughter teases them about getting ready for the club.
  12. Eight or nine paragraphs describing the strip club in clinical detail.
  13. Wife pulled onstage by a dancer, the husband offered a lap dance by a dancer.
  14. Finally—the wife claims she can do it better. A coworker offers $20 for her to give her husband a lap dance. Another coworker then asks for one himself.
My thoughts:
  • The runway is long. Without the exciting premise or strong title/blurb, many readers might have clicked away. Even as someone with a strong LW fetish, I felt impatient and skimmed parts.
  • The setup takes an entire page. There’s some sexual hum, but not enough arousal. My dick only reacted once the coworker pulled out the bill.
  • Does all this setup improve the story or diminish the hot premise?
  • Couldn’t the runway start shorter, say, with the strip club invitation, plus a compressed explanation that the wife has already seen the four coworkers a few times during vanilla outings? Maybe she knows their wives too.
  • You are thinking. Hold up. What about the daughter? Don't we need the long set-up to introduce her for later payoff? In my opinion, she could be introduced only when her role becomes relevant, rather than early.
  • Does a long runway really make the story better for the average reader arousal-wise? If the story aims for more than arousal (themes, realism, character work), yes, it has merit. But if arousal is the goal, it feels like padding.
  • This style is common in Lit stories. I’ve written like this for all my stories published so far. But in terms of stroker effectiveness, I think long runways weaken reader engagement.
Story 2:
Now That’s Service! (Lovecraft68)

Premise: Laura gets room service, and her husband watches.

The Runway:
  1. Sexually charged conversation about her dress.
  2. Husband protests about her going to the club, anxious about men checking her out. She teases him about how far men go.
  3. She declares she wants extramarital sex (“my lipstick’s only getting smeared on one thing tonight and it’s not your lips”).
  4. Nine paragraphs of introspection: her looks, her sexual history, her excitement at whoring herself out.
  5. Four paragraphs about her husband looking older, more tired, compared to her still being “in the market.”
  6. Dialogue: husband notices no bra, she teases she’s not wearing panties either. They discuss hotwifing—him moral, her cynical.
  7. Argument about her going out, interrupted by snowstorm.
  8. She’s disappointed, he’s amused.
  9. Husband offers sex, she’s reluctant.
  10. She bends over, challenges him, gives him a chance.
  11. He fumbles—can’t get hard.
  12. Scene ends.
  13. Seven paragraphs of her pottering around until the waiter finally arrives.
My thoughts:
  • This runway is stronger than Story 1. It starts with a bang—extramarital sex is introduced immediately. Their dialogue about hotwifing is fun.
  • But the tension isn’t maintained. It’s interrupted by introspection (paras 4–5) and the snowed-in twist.
  • It heats up again when she flaunts being braless/pantyless, but again the momentum is lost.
  • The husband fumbling is fun to read. But that leds to nothing. Then comes another delay before the waiter appears.
  • It feels like being led toward a punchline that never lands, only for the punchline (waiter arrives) to pop in cold, without buildup.
Improvement idea (in my very very humble opinion):

The twist (snowed in) should be established at the start. She could dress up anyway, determined to find someone else in the hotel. After the husband fumbles, she leaves the room with the aim of finding men in the lobby to fuck. But she notices a young waiter in the hallway. She finds him hot. She likes him but assumes nothing can happen because he’s working. Then—surprise—he wheels a cart toward her room. Her husband unknowingly ordered room service. The twist would land with the climax instead of derailing the build-up.

Story 3:
Stepdaughter Fills In Ch.1 (Sirhugs)

Premise: The stepdaughter takes her mom’s place.

Runway:
  • Opens with husband and wife discussing the daughter filling in for Valentine’s Day. Husband protests, wife insists. She even mentions anal.
  • Husband recalls the roses arriving, daughter thanking him.
  • Two–three lines about raising her.
  • Dialogue: he asks her to be his Valentine, she’s excited but reluctant.
  • Mom calls, tells her she must take care of him.
  • Husband notices her as a sexual being—nipples, bare ass, kiss on cheek.
  • Sees her nightie riding up the stairs, imagines her naked in the shower.
  • He masturbates, thinking about her nipples, her pussy, and her with boys her age and professors.
  • One paragraph: they set out for their date.
  • Climax begins: touching in the car, flirting, peeking at her tits, etc. The road to anal is paved.
My thoughts:
  • This is the strongest runway I’ve ever read. The premise is introduced immediately.
  • With every line, the heat builds. There’s no wasted space.
  • By the time they’re on the date, the reader has been carried on a steady, rising wave straight to the climax. No interruptions, no detours.
What I Learned
  1. The runway shouldn’t be far from the premise.
    • If the story is about a mom facesitting on her son during a panic attack, don’t give medical history or family dynamics. Start in the bathroom, show her body, bam—the son’s panic attack interrupts, and she acts.
    • If it’s about an incel discovering a fetish-conjuring power, don’t recount years of rejection. Start with him jerking off to the magazine, then discovering he can conjure items, then a girl. Only later, show the consequence that he can’t undo it.
  2. The heat should rise as we approach climax.
    • Don’t start with a fiery scene and then backtrack into mundane filler. That creates anticlimax. If you start with a fiery scene, the fire should get bigger and bigger as we enter into the story premise.
  3. The first scene must aim at the punchline.
    • Don’t spend time on scenes that don’t lead directly to the climax. Readers feel cheated if their investment leads nowhere.
  4. Don’t write two runways for one punchline.
    • Example: a wife going into prostitution. Don’t write one whole chapter of her teasing with her husband about being pimped out without payoff, then another chapter about her losing her job and hitting the streets. That’s two runways for one premise. Readers will feel frustrated. It feels much hotter to read about either one. E.g The two discuss about the possibility of pimping the wife out. They start finding men on Tinder or on the market place to make it work. Then, after some failure, they get one offer. If you want a twist then, you can say the man is a neighbour or a family friend. Or the other runway. The wife has already been interested about hookers and their lives but never got an opportunity to get to know them. Then, one day she gets fired and instead of applying another prestigious position, she thinks about trying out this interesting job.
 
The way I do anything is to just do it. I write the story, I don't stop and think "Okay, need tension here" "Okay, time for an angry, sad, funny....scene" I let it flow the way its meant to. Once its done if I read through and think it missed the mark a bit, I'll work on it, but most if it will be fine and in flow.

Asking others how they write is a waste of time, they're them, you're you.

Trust your ability.
 
The way I do anything is to just do it. I write the story, I don't stop and think "Okay, need tension here" "Okay, time for an angry, sad, funny....scene" I let it flow the way its meant to. Once its done if I read through and think it missed the mark a bit, I'll work on it, but most if it will be fine and in flow.

Asking others how they write is a waste of time, they're them, you're you.

Trust your ability.
Yes, Sir
 
I start with a story idea, maybe not always with a climax in mind from the start but almost always. Sometimes the idea is simple enough that it could be summarized in one or two sentences. Those stories don't generally have much tension, although maybe a little will appear as I get the plot from point A to point B to point C and fill in details.

Other times I know from the start that there will be twists and turns. Those might be what you'd call tension, although I don't try to write a specific number of words or scenes devoted to them. As I'm writing scenes out, I might find that they don't flow right or need more development, and I'll add scenes before the climax I had planned, whether for tension or other reasons.

"Story" is vague, while we're at it. I tend to write stories mostly between 5 and 10 thousand words, i.e. strokers, in mostly but not entirely episodic series. Someone writing 25,000-word standalone stories would probably have a different answer to this from me, and someone writing 80,000-word stories published in 5 or 6 parts would probably have a third answer.
 
Interesting analysis, and thorough. Since all the stories are around or under 10k words, and I mostly write LS slow burns around 20-50k long, the rules of my world don't quite fit with your conclusions. But that just shows that the rules of tension building may be very different for different categories, and that's quite interesting.

In my case, I'll make you go through maybe 20k words of runway before getting to the climax. And you'll probably need to drive through the suburbs for a while before even getting to the airport and then get lost looking for your gate before you even see the runway. The runway will then also have emotional potholes, ready to derail you. And if you haven't choked up with tears at least once before you reach take-off speed, I have failed.

When I finally get to the climax, I kinda just hope you're so tired of crying you'll appreciate a sex scene, even if it's not that good, because it means the emotionally bruised MC's might get to have a HEA after all.

What I'm trying to say is that I mostly do emotional tension. If I manage to weave some sexual tension into that, then all the better, but it's not the main thing I build my stories around.
 
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