Hello! I'm Ashy_Haze, your local traumatizer of children! *Ahem* Let me rephrase that. I have a lot of trauma in my books. With characters who are children. But that's not the point! The point is that I am here to teach you about a wonderful thing in writing: ✨foreshadowing✨
First of all, what is foreshadowing? Well, according to the Oxford dictionary, foreshadowing is "a warning or indication of a future event" but my definition is little hints and clues which are sprinkled into the story for something which will happen. It can be something as huge as a BIG REVEAL which happens over the course of several books, or just something which will happen in the next scene.
387Please respect copyright.PENANAlBxs9y59zQ
Examples:
Let's say I'm writing a story about...traumatized kids, and one of them is doing their normal things, going about their daily life when all of a sudden, they get a paper cut on their finger. In the next scene, they slice their finger open more. This scene, (while being very rudimentary) is an example of foreshadowing.
387Please respect copyright.PENANAnifClP6Luc
Foreshadowing can be something as simple and easy to read as the example above or complex and poetic in a sense that only reading back through that scene (or entire book) you can understand more of what those scenes mean and realize the foreshadowing.
387Please respect copyright.PENANAuj7DVrlwJ7
Anyways, that's my lesson on foreshadowing! I hope you understand it a bit better, and if not, look it up on your own 'cause I tend to be not the best teacher.
387Please respect copyright.PENANAbVozzZPJtU
Peace!
ns 172.68.245.177da2