Overcoming Passive-Aggressive Writing

The feedback I received on my first submission to my friends in the Deadwood Writers group included many comments about my use of passive voice. Make that many, many, MANY comments.  After I highlighted every instance of the verb ‘to be,’ my pages lit up in yellow.  If I owned a color printer at the time, I could easily have used up an entire yellow ink cartridge.  I had a problem – a passive-aggressive writing problem.

As my first step toward using an active voice instead of passive, I looked up the grammar rules. In its most basic form, passive sentence structure is Object-Verb-Subject: The bear was chased by Tom.  Ho hum.  Yawn.  The sentence sounds like the action is over.  Often the stories we write don’t happen in the present moment and this is where the passive voice snares the writer.  We use past tense forms of the verb ‘to be’ to give the sense of things happening in the past.  Active voice can do the same thing, but in a more compelling way.

Consider the active sentence structure of Subject-Verb-Object: Tom chased the bear. Even though events are still happening in the past, there’s more immediacy and drama.  Comparing the two sentences, you can see the verb ‘chased’ already shows past tense.  Adding the word ‘was,’ as in the passive sentence, is redundant and slows down the pace.

I got a lot of mileage toward improving my writing from this simple sentence conversion method. Here are three examples taken from that first submission:

 

Angela was bombarded with questions from the team.

The team bombarded Angela with questions. 

 

She tried to get an explanation from Fred, but was brushed aside.

She tried to get an explanation from Fred, but he brushed her aside. 

 

Cindy’s fresh coat of nail polish was ruined when she jumped from the surprise.

Cindy ruined her fresh coat of nail polish when she jumped from the surprise.

 

These fixes to sentences using simple past (-ed) versions of verbs were my first round of corrections and cut the amount of yellow highlights down by half. In the second round, I tackled the past progressive sentences that used the –ing version of verbs: Tom was chasing the bear.  I revised these sentences with conversions to the simple past structure:

 

Gladys was now hurling packages of paper at him.

Gladys hurled packages of paper at him.

 

Tom was opening an email from Todd.

Tom opened an email from Todd.

 

The document was making its way to dozens of fax machines around the company and the city.

The document made its way to dozens of fax machines around the company and the city.

 

By this point, I cut the amount of yellow by three-quarters. The highlights remaining required less obvious, more thoughtful changes to achieve an active voice.  In picking out examples for this blog post, I realized the common theme involved adjectives used in conjunction with a form of the verb ‘to be.’  One way to fix the problem is to get rid of the verb ‘to be’ and select another verb that is similar in meaning to the original verb/adjective combination.

 

Tom was a little concerned that someone did something to his cube.

Tom worried that someone did something to his cube.

 

Todd was openly vocal about the lack of work Tom did.

Todd complained openly about the lack of work Tom did.

 

Another fix is to move the adjective to a place in the sentence where the verb ‘to be’ is not necessary.

 

If his hard drive was damaged, it would set back the Granger project even further.

A damaged hard drive would set back the Granger project even further.

 

When these adjustments don’t seem to work, you may have to rethink and rewrite the sentence.

 

That thought was enough for Sylvia.

“No way!” thought Sylvia.

 

Tom opened the file and was not treated to erotic images.

Tom opened the file but did not find the erotic images he hoped to see.

 

Did I eliminate all use of passive voice? No.  A few passive sentences are not going to make or break an entire piece.  In fact, trying to eliminate all instances may bring you to a point of crafting sentences that sound pretentious, flowery, or verbose.

When assessing your use of passive voice, the problem is one of numbers. For example, ten instances of the word ‘was’ in a paragraph is passive-aggressive and clearly needs to be fixed.  A page with ten occurrences is passive-assertive and still requires reduction efforts.  Ten passive sentences scattered across ten pages is mildly passive.  Though not likely to raise eyebrows, it’s worth taking a look to see if you can change some sentences from passive to active.  If you have ten cases in a hundred pages, not only are you in control of your passive-aggressive writing tendencies, you’re also saving a lot of money on yellow printer cartridges.

9 comments

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    • Maureen on October 29, 2014 at 8:30 am
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    The goal to remain action oriented in our writing is ever before us! Good reminders here – and love all the examples of how to convert passive sentences. I believe Stephen King also advised against the use of words ending in “ly.” Wow, how much better our writing becomes by just eliminating “to be,” “was,” and anything ending in “ing” or “ly.” Simple to think about, but sometimes oh so hard to execute. Thanks for the great reminders!

    1. Just checked a 1,000-word piece I’m writing. I have 4 “to be”, 3 “was”, 5 “ing” and 11 “ly”… How’d I do?

        • Maureen on October 30, 2014 at 8:31 am
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        You are writing – as far as I’m concerned, you are doing great! But…. Eleven “ly”…? Come on, you KNOW you can do better! As for the rest, Sue showed you the way to redemption!

    • Kelly Bixby on October 16, 2014 at 10:51 pm
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    Sue, I find verb forms to be confusing, but I can see the immediate improvement of voice in your examples. We have to learn to embrace the revision process, don’t we?

      • Sue Remisiewicz on October 19, 2014 at 6:24 pm
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      Yes, without it we don’t grow and who wants to stagnate?

    • Book Lover on September 24, 2014 at 9:25 am
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    Sue, thank you for the lighthearted, yet instructive, piece on the passive voice. I’ll write my stories, then edit carefully to eliminate the use of “to be” whenever possible. Keep up the good work.

      • Sue Remisiewicz on September 28, 2014 at 4:29 pm
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      Thank you, Book Lover!

  1. Thanks, Sue. All good advise. I did your highlight trick and found 241 uses of “was” in the first 300 pages of “NS,” so, not so bad, but over 1,900 uses of “ing.” Looking (pun intended) these over, most are within dialog and not narrative. Characters speak with a passive voice all the time, (“I was going to stop on my way home but forgot”) but narrators cannot (Sally was going to stop on her way home but forgot).. rewritten, Sally forgot to stop on her way home, takes both the passive “was” and “ing” out of the narrator’s voice.
    Thanks for sharing! -P

      • Sue Remisiewicz on September 28, 2014 at 4:28 pm
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      Hi Phil! I agree there’s more leeway in dialog for passive voice as opposed to the narration. I think care still has to be given to make sure it is not overdone. Thanks for the comment!

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