Use this exercise when your story needs just one thing more.
Appearance is one of my favorite theatrical elements. Something shows up, shows itself. There are many ways to arrive at appearance; one is through the art of grafting.
Tree grafting analogy
Grafting is, in tree cultivation terms, the splicing into one plant the flowering or fruiting stems of another. The host plant supports the grafted element. New blooms or fruits appear alongside the host’s natural blooms or fruits. To graft, the surfaces are prepared to meet and adjoin seamlessly, and then they’re bound together until they grow into each other.
What could be grafted onto your story that might take hold enough to fruit or flower? How much of the story’s basic structure and energy would be needed to support that new addition? How apparent is the difference in kind? How do you prepare the surfaces so they can bond? What kind of wrap, splint, or stent would be needed to add strength to the joining? What fantastic tree could you imagine? Does the lemon tree sprout boughs of holly? Does the oak tree hold pinecones? Does the orange tree grow a single branch of grapefruit?
Building and grounds grafting analogy
You know that house at the edge of town? The one sprouting weird, mismatched additions made from mismatched materials? The one tiled with broken mirrors? What addition would you build onto the house, if you were a builder and knew the permitting authorities would never come knocking? Or would you add a garden? A reflecting pool? A corn maze?
I’ve made several grafting revisions to plays that feel at draft-stage both somehow complete in themselves and not dimensional enough. I’ve found these grafts allow for new poetic layers, broader resonances, while not upsetting the original symmetries I wish to preserve.
Prep
Prewriting: Fastwrite (5 mins) on the different poetic resonances or moods of your story. Consider what other moods or resonances might be welcome in it.
Diagram: Identify locations in your story that might support a grafted intrusion. Location here means both points in time, but also points in space. Use a diagram to note different possible branches or add-ons that could be grafted to these locations.
Write
Write one or more of your imagined grafts. Pay attention to whether it fruits or flowers. Ask yourself if it’s going to disturb other elements of the story beyond the graft site. If so, write those disturbances in.