Hi, I'm new here and this is my first time posting, so this is also a "Hello, everybody" I guess.
So I have a few ideas, the others I think are ready to be stories, but then there's the big one. This one isn't quite ready and is my craziest idea but I think it can really work, just I'm stuck given the concept itself.
Basically it's a musical, yes a fat fetish musical. A love story between two women, but I don't want to reveal too much given it all centers around a plot twist.
The plot twist is one part I'm having trouble with. Otherwise, I'm fairly okay. The issue is that I want it to be ambiguous and debatable and not clear cut, and I'm not sure how to do that.
I'm a little hesitant to admit all I have for inspiration on the idea as they might give the wrong idea but I'll try my best to explain what's going on in this plot twist.
Towards the end, we reveal that no one else even noticed the events that transpired in the story, or even claim facts that can't be true given what we saw through the lead's perspective. Also, the lead meets a friend who is also implied to be all in her head, an alternate personality that she meets, this friend is the one who finally convinces the lead to gain weight in the first place.
I feel that I might be making it too much in favor of the idea that the lead's friend isn't real but I would like to imply that she could be. Same with the events that supposedly didn't happen, I would like to imply that they might have happened but the characters that surround the lead are too wrapped up in their own affairs to even notice and thus don't know.
Luckily, I've made the lead's friend a vampire and thus somethings could be explained by vampire powers (like the lead's sudden weight loss at the end, which is somewhat implied to have been her faking it due to fat suits in the closet). Still it doesn't cover everything, like where her friend goes in that final scene.
So yes, the vague story is that the lead gets to become a vampire after meeting one and then the two go on an adventure gaining weight. Once getting to a massive size though, the lead finds herself back to being skinny again and her friend has disappeared and we imply she's back at the beginning of the story again as her life exists in a loop due to being a fictional character in a story, thus she just starts back at the beginning.
The story focuses mainly on her character development, as she goes from being the same uncaring person the world trained her to be, to finding some joy in life and how to use her wealth in a better way than buying useless furniture and designer suits. To indulge in hedonism of a better variety than what she was going to do.
She learns to be herself, even if herself doesn't fit in, and to just be proud to be who she really is on the inside and to not be ashamed of it and embrace it. This awakening however may have all been in her head, and thus now it's time for her to actually do it for real (if that's possible).
Even describing it, I feel like I'm implying that it has to be all in her head even when I want it to be possible it isn't. So I''l reduce to these possibilities I'd want the reader to have once it's done:
-The lead's friend is real, the events they went on are real (The story should be taken at face value and everything that is said is what really happened in the story)
-The lead's friend is real, the events they went on are not (The vampire friend helped her live a life where her fantasies came true by making it all up for her, or she let the lead's imagination run wild and helped her keep it going)
-The lead's friend isn't real, the events really did happen though (she's been a vampire taking on multiple names since she became one a long time ago)
-The lead's friend isn't real, and neither are the events (she takes on a fat vampire alter ego to get away from her life, using fat suits to embody it and her unnatural metabolism to eat to her hearts content)
-The story is fiction, it exist in a loop, she is aware of this (It starts her day over again at the end, but it's possible that it's just because each day is "just like any other day" and by the end perhaps she has encountered the intro realizing what must happen is her doing it again)
Hopefully this will be helpful to both me and you to figure it all out but I'm okay with saying more if it will help anyone understand what I'm even talking about.
I guess my question is, how do I imply this without confirming it? I'm new to really writing stories and publish them and I'm going to do some others before this one to make sure this one is good based on the criticisms I get from the others.
The music will be electronic (80s-ish, not exactly), and while at one point in time I was going to do this as a stage play or even a movie, I'm going to just do an audio drama for now with a published script. I've apparently went on too long for the character limit
So I have a few ideas, the others I think are ready to be stories, but then there's the big one. This one isn't quite ready and is my craziest idea but I think it can really work, just I'm stuck given the concept itself.
Basically it's a musical, yes a fat fetish musical. A love story between two women, but I don't want to reveal too much given it all centers around a plot twist.
The plot twist is one part I'm having trouble with. Otherwise, I'm fairly okay. The issue is that I want it to be ambiguous and debatable and not clear cut, and I'm not sure how to do that.
I'm a little hesitant to admit all I have for inspiration on the idea as they might give the wrong idea but I'll try my best to explain what's going on in this plot twist.
Towards the end, we reveal that no one else even noticed the events that transpired in the story, or even claim facts that can't be true given what we saw through the lead's perspective. Also, the lead meets a friend who is also implied to be all in her head, an alternate personality that she meets, this friend is the one who finally convinces the lead to gain weight in the first place.
I feel that I might be making it too much in favor of the idea that the lead's friend isn't real but I would like to imply that she could be. Same with the events that supposedly didn't happen, I would like to imply that they might have happened but the characters that surround the lead are too wrapped up in their own affairs to even notice and thus don't know.
Luckily, I've made the lead's friend a vampire and thus somethings could be explained by vampire powers (like the lead's sudden weight loss at the end, which is somewhat implied to have been her faking it due to fat suits in the closet). Still it doesn't cover everything, like where her friend goes in that final scene.
So yes, the vague story is that the lead gets to become a vampire after meeting one and then the two go on an adventure gaining weight. Once getting to a massive size though, the lead finds herself back to being skinny again and her friend has disappeared and we imply she's back at the beginning of the story again as her life exists in a loop due to being a fictional character in a story, thus she just starts back at the beginning.
The story focuses mainly on her character development, as she goes from being the same uncaring person the world trained her to be, to finding some joy in life and how to use her wealth in a better way than buying useless furniture and designer suits. To indulge in hedonism of a better variety than what she was going to do.
She learns to be herself, even if herself doesn't fit in, and to just be proud to be who she really is on the inside and to not be ashamed of it and embrace it. This awakening however may have all been in her head, and thus now it's time for her to actually do it for real (if that's possible).
Even describing it, I feel like I'm implying that it has to be all in her head even when I want it to be possible it isn't. So I''l reduce to these possibilities I'd want the reader to have once it's done:
-The lead's friend is real, the events they went on are real (The story should be taken at face value and everything that is said is what really happened in the story)
-The lead's friend is real, the events they went on are not (The vampire friend helped her live a life where her fantasies came true by making it all up for her, or she let the lead's imagination run wild and helped her keep it going)
-The lead's friend isn't real, the events really did happen though (she's been a vampire taking on multiple names since she became one a long time ago)
-The lead's friend isn't real, and neither are the events (she takes on a fat vampire alter ego to get away from her life, using fat suits to embody it and her unnatural metabolism to eat to her hearts content)
-The story is fiction, it exist in a loop, she is aware of this (It starts her day over again at the end, but it's possible that it's just because each day is "just like any other day" and by the end perhaps she has encountered the intro realizing what must happen is her doing it again)
Hopefully this will be helpful to both me and you to figure it all out but I'm okay with saying more if it will help anyone understand what I'm even talking about.
I guess my question is, how do I imply this without confirming it? I'm new to really writing stories and publish them and I'm going to do some others before this one to make sure this one is good based on the criticisms I get from the others.
The music will be electronic (80s-ish, not exactly), and while at one point in time I was going to do this as a stage play or even a movie, I'm going to just do an audio drama for now with a published script. I've apparently went on too long for the character limit
4 years