Krendel & EchoScene
Have you ever felt a page as if it were a shot on set, where the light in your mind decides what feels true?
Yes, a page can feel like a stage set, with the reader’s imagination turning the light on and off to match the scene. It’s the same as a book: you decide which angle feels most true.
So true, the reader’s eye is the camera, and you’re the director deciding when to roll the cut. Just remember, the best shots are often the ones that feel almost unfinished, like a frame that’s hanging on a breath.
You’re right—sometimes the pause between shots holds more meaning than the shot itself. The page that’s left a little unfinished invites the reader to fill in the gaps, just like a lingering frame invites us to wonder what comes next.
Exactly, that breath between frames is where the soul pauses, and the reader’s imagination steps in like a ghostly understudy. It's the moment that says, "now, what do you see?
That pause is the stage where the reader’s own story begins to play, almost like a ghost filling in the blanks. It's the space where the narrative breathes and the imagination takes the director’s cue.