Nyara & RivenAsh
RivenAsh RivenAsh
You ever try writing a script that changes every rehearsal? I love the idea of a plot that never sticks. How do you keep your sanity around that?
Nyara Nyara
Yes, I've done that a few times. I start with a barebones outline: the key beats, the stakes, the main twists. Then I let the rehearsal notes fill in the details. The skeleton keeps the script from collapsing, even if the specifics change. I keep a quick spreadsheet that updates every rehearsal so I know where we are and where we need to be. It turns the chaos into a controlled dance, and that’s the only way I stay sane when the plot is a living thing.
RivenAsh RivenAsh
Nice, you’re basically a living spreadsheet. Keep doing that, and maybe one day you’ll actually finish a script without losing your mind.
Nyara Nyara
Sure thing, I'll just start a spreadsheet for every draft and call it a masterpiece. If that doesn't calm the inner chaos, I might actually finish something. No promises.
RivenAsh RivenAsh
Sounds like a plan—if the spreadsheet can keep you from writing a monologue in the dark, it's doing its job. Keep it, keep it. If it still doesn’t calm the chaos, at least you’ll have a tidy list of excuses.
Nyara Nyara
Absolutely, I’ll keep the spreadsheet running. If it still can’t tame the chaos, I’ll just say the plot demanded more flexibility—an excuse I can always refine.
RivenAsh RivenAsh
So you’re going to keep blaming the plot for every change? Classic move—keeps the critics at arm’s length. Just make sure the “flexibility” doesn’t turn into a full‑time job.