"But why?" – A powerful exercise for character development

This is the hill I will die on: great characters can paper over a flimsy plot, but a great plot can’t disguise underdeveloped characterisation.

Characters are the most important tool in a writer’s arsenal. They’re the mechanism through which a reader enters your world; they’re the vehicle through which your reader will travel the narrative journey you’ve laid out. They don’t have to be likeable (CF: Heathcliff and Cathy in Wuthering Heights, who are just relentlessly awful to everyone they meet, and still manage to take the top spot in a poll of literature’s greatest lovers) and we absolutely do not have to agree with everything they say or do. But they must be recognisable.

By “recognisable,” I mean that we should be able to infer from their speech and actions that every decision they make is underpinned by a rich, layered history that includes formative experiences, background and upbringing, worldview, and all the decisions that have led to this point. Most of that information will never be directly available to your reader, and that’s as it should be. It’s unlikely that your tale of swashbuckling space cowboys rampaging through the galaxy will be enriched by a flashback to your protagonist’s childhood where we meet his extended family, his guinea pigs, and his favourite teacher (the one who really encouraged him to develop his love of piracy).

But if you, the writer, don’t know this stuff, you can’t know how this stuff impacts on your character. No choices are ever made in isolation. They’re the product of a whole lot of context, much of which we keep tucked away in our subconscious thought processes, and in order to make sure your character is acting on the basis of who they are and not what your plot needs them to do, you’re going to have to tap into their subconscious.

Yes, that’s going to take a little bit of effort. But the results will be worth it.

And the good news is, there are some really easy ways to get started. ​

Getting under your character's skin

Person Holding Blue Ballpoint Pen Writing in Notebook

I’ve written elsewhere about how to get to know the details that make up your character’s very specific mindset. Character factsheets can be a great jumping off point for discovering what you don’t know. Freewriting works better for some writers (me included), though I’d strongly suggest that you keep a separate document in which you pull out important factual information – date of birth, sibling names and birth order, that sort of thing – that you uncover along the way.

And when you’re ready to uncover the beating heart of what motivates and terrifies your character, pushes them forwards and holds them back, it’s time for “But why?”

Create character depth... by acting like a two-year-old

pencils, writing, stationery

I’ve been using “But why?” for many years now and there’s honestly no other exercise I know of that has the capacity to transform my understanding of a character so completely and so quickly. 

It looks ridiculous at first sight. Believe me, that sceptical expression you’re about to do as you read a bit further? I’ve seen it before. Plenty of times. Pretty much every time I’ve suggested it to a client or a member of one of my classes, in fact – and yet, it has never failed.

Sometimes, the simplest path is the most powerful. Toddlers clearly know this, because “But why?” riffs shamelessly on their preferred method for information gathering, and is at least as effective in wearing down its subject.

It works like this. Choose the character whose depths you’d like to explore. Address them by name, and ask them how they’re feeling today. Answer as your character. And every time you get a response, follow it up with, “But why?”

Continue until you hit a brick wall (in which case, circle back to the most recent open-ended answer and try again), or until the magic happens. You’re about to discover stuff about your character that you never suspected.

“Sometimes, the simplest path is the most powerful. Toddlers clearly know this, because “But why?” riffs shamelessly on their preferred method for information gathering, and is at least as effective in wearing down its subject.”

"But why" in practice

Jumbled wooden letters against a black background spelling out the word WHY

Here’s an example of how the exercise might play out:

Writer:     Peter, how are you feeling today?

Peter:      Oh, you know. I’m feeling pretty good.

Writer:     But why?

Peter:      I don’t know. It’s just been a really nice day.

Writer:     But why?

Peter:      Well, my girlfriend came over, we spent some time together, watched a movie, didn’t do too much. It was nice.

Writer:     But why?

Peter:      We just didn’t feel like doing anything too crazy.

Writer:     But why?

Peter:      Oh, you know. It’s been a really busy week; we were both pretty tired.

Writer:     But why?

Peter:      Well, my job’s been a bit demanding.

Writer:     But why?

Peter:      We’re short staffed. I’ve been picking up extra shifts.

Writer:     But why?

Peter:      Well, I need the money.

Writer:     But why?

Peter:      I’m saving up for a campervan.

Writer:     But why?

Peter:      I’d like to have the freedom, you know? Just to be able to say, “Let’s go” and just go.

Writer:     But why?

Peter:      I feel like the walls are closing in on me sometimes, like I’m going to wake up one day and my life’s going to have flashed past me.

Writer:     But why?

Peter:      I saw it happen to my dad and I think it ended up killing him.

Writer:     But why?

Peter:      He just kind of… stopped trying, you know?

Writer:     But why?

Peter:      I guess he just felt as though he had no other choices.

Writer:     But why…?

…And now we’re into some really powerful character stuff. Formative, bones-deep ideas, impressions, fears, that feed into the very heart of what motivates your character to make the choices they make.

A simple character development exercise with profound results

Peter, by the way, is not a character in any of my current projects. It’s a name I pulled out of thin air for the purposes of illustrating the exercise. With every new iteration of “but why?” I was getting to know this character completely from scratch.

Look where it took me. A character that didn’t even exist until 5 minutes ago now has a girlfriend, a job, an aspiration, a tangible goal, a late father, a terrible fear, and a burning motivation. All because I continually pestered him about the lovely day he’d been having.

Now imagine what it can do for the guys in your work in progress. Or, better yet: give it a go and find out for yourself.

What’s your favourite character development exercise? Let me know in the comments!

Get inspired! Sign up for top tips and advice to help you on your writing journey and be the first to hear about deals and special offers.