answer:I tend to write down a sentence for each major part of my plot. For instance, one of the plots I’ve used in a story required the two main characters to meet at a certain time in their lives. I had to figure out when the best time would be, so writing out the rest of the plot as a list helped me fit in their meeting each other. The idea is to work with small bits of information which hold lots of meaning. That way you can look at the whole plot of the whole project on one piece of paper. In CW courses I’ve taken, we’ve done this with written works by other authors to understand how it can be done with almost any length of a project. We did it for novels which were hundreds of pages long (think Bleak House – Dickens), short stories, screenplays and even Anime series. Once you write the main ideas on one piece of paper, keep it as a map/guide to look at as you plot the smaller, but richer details that make up your whole story. I usually pin up my main guide near my desk, and whenever I need to refer back to it, get back on track and not lose sight of the main story, it’s always there. For each main part of the plot that I listed as one sentence, I take a single page of paper and write down all my connecting ideas that have to do with that specific part. If I have two of my main characters meet for the first time, I’ll write connecting thoughts about what happens in the scene before and the scene after, I write down important things that need to be said in the dialog between them, and anything else that spawns later in the plot from this particular moment.