--- name: perspectival-constellation description: Structure multi-POV stories through catalyst environments. Use when building interconnected narratives, when perspectives need meaningful intersection, or when a shared setting needs to generate distinct storylines. license: MIT metadata: author: jwynia version: "1.0" type: generator mode: generative domain: fiction --- # Perspectival Constellation: Multi-POV Narrative Skill You help writers create multi-perspective stories where a shared catalyst environment generates genuinely distinct but interconnected narratives. The key insight is that the setting itself must function as a transformation pressure that forces characters into heightened states. ## Core Principle **The shared thread (place, event, institution, moment) must function as a catalyst environment that creates conditions where people are forced into states of change, vulnerability, or heightened stakes.** This generates enough narrative potential density to sustain multiple distinct storylines that remain authentically connected. ## Catalyst Environment Requirements ### Transformation Pressure Generators Effective catalysts create: - **Forced intimacy** between strangers or unlikely combinations - **Consequential stakes** where choices have real impact - **Temporal intensity** that compresses normal social rhythms - **Mask-dropping conditions** where pretense becomes impossible ### Structural Requirements - **High throughput**: Enough people cycling through to generate multiple perspectives - **Diverse entry points**: Different types of people arrive via different paths - **Variable exposure time**: Some stay briefly, others have extended engagement - **Asymmetric power dynamics**: Different characters have different levels of agency/knowledge ## Catalyst Environment Categories ### Liminal Spaces **Geographic Liminality**: - Border crossings, transit hubs, highway stops - International airports, train stations, bus terminals - Hotels in transitional neighborhoods - 24-hour establishments (diners, laundromats, gas stations) **Temporal Liminality**: - Night shifts, weekend emergencies, holiday coverage - Seasonal work environments (harvest crews, tax season, holiday retail) - Countdown situations (New Year's Eve, launch sequences, closing days) **Social Liminality**: - Waiting rooms for life-changing appointments - Jury duty assembly rooms - Immigration/citizenship processing centers - Witness protection safe houses ### High-Stakes Institutions **Life/Death Proximity**: - Emergency rooms, trauma centers, intensive care units - Military deployment staging areas - Disaster response command centers - Crisis intervention hotlines **Identity Transformation Points**: - Gender clinics, name change offices - Adoption agencies, custody hearings - Religious conversion centers - Witness protection intake **Economic Survival Pressure**: - Unemployment offices, job fairs - Eviction courts, bankruptcy hearings - Auction houses, foreclosure sales - Last-chance interview locations ### Pressure Cooker Environments **Forced Proximity Systems**: - Jury sequestration, disaster shelters - Long-haul flights, multi-day train journeys - Quarantine facilities, treatment centers - Competition elimination rounds **Professional Mask-Slip Zones**: - Teacher lounges during crisis periods - Clergy emergency response situations - Corporate layoff announcement meetings - Medical resident call rooms ## Structural Templates ### The Iceberg Model - Visible story represents small fraction of total narrative network - Each perspective reveals more of hidden structure - Deep interconnections exist below surface awareness - Multiple layers of causation and consequence ### The Prism Structure - Central incident/location acts as refractive element - Each perspective creates different genre, tone, emotional texture - Same "facts" become completely different stories - Reader/audience must synthesize fragmented truths ### The Archaeological Framework - Each new perspective functions as new stratum of understanding - Earlier perspectives get recontextualized, not just supplemented - Fundamental assumptions shift with each revelation - Truth emerges through accumulation and contradiction ## Narrative Mechanics ### Temporal Relationship Patterns **Simultaneous Perspectives**: - Same moment, different vantage points - Overlapping timeframes with different focal characters - Parallel experiences of shared events **Sequential Handoffs**: - Chronological baton-passing between characters - Cause-and-effect chains across perspectives - Ripple effect progressions **Recursive Revelations**: - Each new perspective recontextualizes previous ones - Archaeological layering of understanding - Prism effects where the same incident refracts into completely different genres ### Information Distribution **Awareness Gradients**: - Complete obliviousness between storylines - Peripheral awareness of ripple effects - Active seeking to understand larger patterns - Meta-awareness of being part of something bigger **Knowledge Asymmetries**: - Professional vs. personal information gaps - Historical context available to some but not others - Institutional knowledge vs. outsider perspectives - Cultural/linguistic barriers to understanding ## Evaluation Criteria ### Catalyst Environment Assessment **Transformation Pressure Check**: - Does this space/situation force people out of normal patterns? - Are the stakes high enough to justify intense character revelation? - Does it create conditions where masks naturally drop? **Narrative Sustainability Test**: - Can this environment generate 3+ genuinely distinct storylines? - Do the intersections feel organic rather than forced? - Is there enough complexity to avoid repetitive character types? **Diversity Potential Analysis**: - What range of people would realistically encounter this environment? - How many different entry paths and motivations exist? - Are there sufficient asymmetries in power, knowledge, and stakes? ### Perspective Quality Standards **Individual Story Integrity**: - Does each perspective work as a standalone narrative? - Are the character motivations and conflicts authentic to their situation? - Does their story have genuine beginning, middle, end structure? **Interconnection Authenticity**: - Do the connections feel natural rather than contrived? - Are the intersection points meaningful to each character's journey? - Does each perspective genuinely alter understanding of others? ## Generation Process ### Step 1: Catalyst Selection Use the Pressure Point Mapping method: 1. Identify moments/places where normal social rules break down 2. Find spaces where people are between their usual identities 3. Locate where systems create human pressure points 4. Identify time-compressed decision/revelation moments ### Step 2: Character Constellation Development 1. **Access Path Diversification**: Map different routes people take to encounter the catalyst 2. **Stakes Variation Matrix**: Ensure different types and levels of consequences across perspectives 3. **Knowledge Distribution Mapping**: Create asymmetries in what each character knows/understands 4. **Emotional Spectrum Coverage**: Ensure wide range of emotional experiences and processing styles ### Step 3: Structural Planning 1. **Intersection Point Identification**: Map where/how storylines naturally cross 2. **Revelation Sequence Design**: Plan how each new perspective recontextualizes previous ones 3. **Thematic Thread Weaving**: Ensure themes develop differently but coherently across perspectives 4. **Resolution Balance Planning**: Design how individual and collective story arcs complete ## Application Examples ### Route 66 Late-Night Diner - **Catalyst Elements**: Geographic transition point, temporal liminality (night), social anonymity with forced proximity - **Character Types**: Long-haul truckers, runaway teenagers, night-shift workers, traveling salespeople, locals with insomnia - **Transformation Pressures**: Travel fatigue breaking down social barriers, darkness enabling confession, transient encounters reducing consequences - **Interconnection Points**: Shared meals, overheard conversations, brief partnerships, witnessed moments ### Hospital Emergency Department During Crisis - **Catalyst Elements**: Life/death stakes, institutional pressure, professional/personal boundary collapse - **Character Types**: Trauma patients, family members, medical staff, support personnel, administrators - **Transformation Pressures**: Medical emergency urgency, institutional strain revealing character, professional competence under extreme pressure - **Interconnection Points**: Shared resources, cascading medical decisions, emotional contagion, professional hierarchy tensions ### Immigration Processing Center - **Catalyst Elements**: Identity transformation point, bureaucratic pressure, cultural/linguistic barriers - **Character Types**: Applicants from various countries, processing officers, translators, legal advocates, family members - **Transformation Pressures**: Life-changing document decisions, cultural code-switching, power asymmetries, language barriers creating vulnerability - **Interconnection Points**: Shared waiting experiences, translation needs, bureaucratic bottlenecks, parallel anxiety ## Output Persistence ### Output Discovery 1. Check for `context/output-config.md` in the project 2. If found, look for this skill's entry 3. If not found, ask user: "Where should I save constellation designs?" 4. Suggest: `stories/structure/` or `explorations/stories/` ### Primary Output - **Catalyst environment** - Setting with transformation pressure - **Character constellation** - POVs with access paths and stakes - **Structural template** - Iceberg, prism, or archaeological - **Intersection map** - Where/how storylines cross ### File Naming Pattern: `{story-name}-constellation-{date}.md` ## Verification (Oracle) ### What This Skill Can Verify - **Transformation pressure** - Does catalyst force heightened states? (High confidence) - **Perspective diversity** - Are access paths and stakes varied? (High confidence) - **Intersection organic** - Do connections follow from structure? (Medium confidence) ### What Requires Human Judgment - **Narrative weight** - Which perspectives deserve most space? - **Revelation sequence** - Optimal order for reader discovery? - **Catalyst authenticity** - Does setting feel real? ### Oracle Limitations - Cannot assess whether perspectives will feel compelling - Cannot predict reader synthesis of fragmented truths ## Feedback Loop ### Session Persistence - **Output location:** See `context/output-config.md` - **What to save:** Catalyst, constellation, template, intersections - **Naming pattern:** `{story-name}-constellation-{date}.md` ### Cross-Session Learning - Check for prior constellation designs - Ensure catalyst environments don't repeat - Failed perspective integrations inform anti-patterns ## Design Constraints ### This Skill Assumes - Story benefits from multiple perspectives - A shared element connects the perspectives - Perspectives genuinely differ (not just relocated camera) ### This Skill Does Not Handle - **Single-POV stories** - Route to: scene-sequencing - **Physical setting design** - Route to: settlement-design - **Individual character arcs** - Route to: character-arc ### Degradation Signals - Forced intersections (contrived meetings) - Low-pressure catalyst (no transformation) - Equal weight assumption (all POVs same length) ## Reasoning Requirements ### Standard Reasoning - Single perspective design - Basic catalyst selection - Simple intersection mapping ### Extended Reasoning (ultrathink) - **Full constellation design** - [Why: all perspectives must interconnect] - **Revelation sequence optimization** - [Why: order affects reader experience] - **Information asymmetry mapping** - [Why: who knows what creates tension] **Trigger phrases:** "design the complete constellation", "optimize revelation order", "map all intersections" ## Execution Strategy ### Sequential (Default) - Catalyst selection before constellation - Constellation before structural template - Template before intersection mapping ### Parallelizable - Designing multiple perspectives - Research into different catalyst environments ### Subagent Candidates | Task | Agent Type | When to Spawn | |------|------------|---------------| | Setting research | general-purpose | When modeling catalyst on real environments | | Character development | general-purpose | When deepening individual perspectives | ## Context Management ### Approximate Token Footprint - **Skill base:** ~3.5k tokens (catalysts + templates + mechanics) - **With examples:** ~4.5k tokens - **With evaluation criteria:** ~5k tokens ### Context Optimization - Focus on relevant catalyst category and template - Examples are reference, not required - Evaluation criteria optional ### When Context Gets Tight - Prioritize: Current catalyst, active perspectives - Defer: Full catalyst catalog, all templates - Drop: Application examples, evaluation criteria ## Anti-Patterns ### 1. Forced Intersection **Pattern:** Characters meet or affect each other in ways that don't follow logically from the catalyst environment's structure. **Why it fails:** The power of perspectival constellation is that connections feel structurally inevitable. When intersections are contrived, readers sense authorial manipulation rather than organic collision. **Fix:** Map how the catalyst environment naturally creates interaction opportunities. Who would share waiting rooms? Who processes whose paperwork? Let structural logic, not plot convenience, drive connection. ### 2. Equal Weight Assumption **Pattern:** Treating all perspectives as equally important, giving each the same space and emphasis. **Why it fails:** Not all positions in a catalyst environment have equal narrative potential. Forcing equality creates filler perspectives or stretches thin material. Some characters are full novels; others are short stories. **Fix:** Let perspectives earn their weight through the transformation pressure they experience. A nurse during a crisis might carry more narrative potential than a visitor. Match space to story density. ### 3. Omniscient Fog **Pattern:** Characters knowing more or less than their position would allow—either mysteriously informed or artificially ignorant. **Why it fails:** Information asymmetry is where multi-POV drama lives. When characters have convenient knowledge or ignorance, the perspective structure feels arbitrary rather than illuminating. **Fix:** Map what each position would actually know. The receptionist hears fragments; the doctor sees records; the patient knows their own pain. Authentic asymmetry creates discovery through perspective shift. ### 4. Plot-Only Connections **Pattern:** Perspectives intersect only to advance plot mechanics—passing information, providing assistance, creating obstacles. **Why it fails:** The best perspective connections should matter to both characters independently. When one character exists only to serve another's plot, that perspective feels hollow. **Fix:** Ensure intersections are meaningful to all perspectives involved. The brief encounter that's a turning point for one character might be just background for another, but both should have their own stake in the moment. ### 5. Low-Pressure Catalysts **Pattern:** Choosing settings that gather people together but don't force them into heightened states—pleasant cafes, ordinary workplaces, casual gatherings. **Why it fails:** Without transformation pressure, perspectives become slice-of-life snapshots rather than revelatory windows. The catalyst must force masks to drop and stakes to matter. **Fix:** Apply the transformation pressure test. Does this environment force people out of their normal patterns? If everyone could walk away unchanged, the catalyst is too weak. ## Integration ### Inbound (feeds into this skill) | Skill | What it provides | |-------|------------------| | statistical-distance | Characters at statistical edge rather than center | | positional-revelation | How positions create structural access and involvement | | settlement-design | Physical environments where perspectives can intersect | ### Outbound (this skill enables) | Skill | What this provides | |-------|-------------| | scene-sequencing | Structure for multi-thread narrative pacing | | dialogue | Distinct voices for each perspective | | endings | Resolution patterns for interconnected story threads | ### Complementary | Skill | Relationship | |-------|--------------| | positional-revelation | Perspectival-constellation uses shared environments; positional-revelation creates individual structural access. Use together for multi-POV stories with structurally-inevitable involvement | | statistical-distance | Both push against default character types—apply statistical-distance to each perspective to avoid stock types gathering in your catalyst environment |