Editing Emotion: When Less is More

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There is a moment in every manuscript where an emotional beat almost lands…but something feels off. It is powerful, but not polished. Raw, but not resonant. This is where editors walk a tightrope. Touch it too much, and the moment loses its soul. Touch it too little, and the reader misses the point. I learned this while editing a heart-shattering scene for an author. The character was confessing something painful, something she had carried for decades. The emotion was real. The moment was huge. But the writing was drowning in description. She wrote every tear, every breath, every trembling memory. By the end of the paragraph, even I was exhausted. When I gently suggested trimming it down, she said, “But if I remove anything, won’t it feel less emotional?” This is the myth many writers believe. Here is the truth: Emotion is strongest when the writing gets out of its way. Editors preserve emotional beats by: 1. Removing repetition Saying something once with precision is more powerful than saying it five times with intensity. 2. Choosing what matters most Not every physical reaction needs to be listed. Pick the moment that reveals the emotional truth. 3. Leaving space for the reader When everything is explained, readers cannot feel anything. Silence and simplicity invite them into the moment. 4. Protecting the vulnerability We tighten the writing without touching the honesty. Editing emotion is like trimming a rosebush. You cut to help it bloom, not to change its nature. With that author, we kept one image. Just one. The way her character gripped the edge of the table to keep herself from collapsing. Not the tears. Not the trembling. Not the four paragraphs of backstory. Just that single, quiet action. When she read the new version, she whispered, “It feels stronger than the original.” And it was. Because we preserved the emotion, not the explanation. If editors overwrote every emotional beat, novels would look like: “She cried. Then she cried harder. Then she remembered crying last week.” Nobody wants a crying montage. We want truth. We want tension. We want the moment that says everything without shouting. When a story moves you, is it usually because of what is said… or what is left unsaid? #AkpoyiboEshetigho #Ghostpenwriters #EditingSkills #StoryEmotion #WritingCommunity #BookCoach #EmotionalBeats

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