For asserting a moment of narrative control
This is the second in a boxes series considering comics artist Adrian Tomine’s description of telling stories in boxes as a way to assert control over a chaotic experience (read the first boxes prompt here). (Not all comics box their narrative moments in, but he was speaking of his own, which do.) Tomine described the solace of drawing comics, growing up, as having to do with the tight control of narrative that boxes allow, in contrast to how he experienced the world of his own childhood.
Take this idea of a box — the border drawn around the scene, the limited, isolated detail inside it — as a way to assert a narrative in an otherwise chaotic scene. (You might take a lightly suggestive sense of “box” as a limited paragraph or focus. Or you might play with actual typographic boxes, drawing them out freehand on a page or inserting a bordered table into your document so that you can literally write into boxes. Follow your impulse as you transplant the term from comics to your draft.)
Perhaps this you take this up as a generative prompt: imagine a character from your story in progress engulfed in a chaotic experience, or send a chaotic situation to wash over the whole story. Choose a single angle of vision, a single moment in time, and write that moment without feeding forward into anything that follows. The moment is a snapshot, a freeze-frame, and the way it is framed tells the story of the larger confusion.
Or perhaps you take the box up as a way to backtrack into what you’ve already written. Find the most uncontrolled place in your story and replace whatever expansiveness or complexity it has with a tightly controlled and condensed version. What comes forward as important when you focus tightly on a single spot? What, in the unwritten future of the story, might be fed or even controlled by the story asserted in this box?