The Choice That Defines Your Hero
Table of Contents
Most writers think a story is about what the hero wants.
It isn’t.
It’s about what they need — and whether they have the courage to choose it.
If you misunderstand that difference, your ending will feel flat. If you master it, your story will feel inevitable.
Let’s break it down.
Want vs. Need: The Engine of Story
At the beginning of a novel, both the protagonist and antagonist want something.
-
Power
-
Recognition
-
Revenge
-
Love
-
Wealth
They feel incomplete. Something is missing.
And here’s the key: at the start, they are almost the same person.
In Raiders of the Lost Ark, Belloq tells Indiana Jones they are alike — mirror images. He’s right. They share the same obsession.
The difference isn’t in the want.
It’s in the choice they make at the end.
The Hero Must Be Able to Win — and Walk Away
Here’s where many stories weaken:
The hero doesn’t fail to get the want.
They must be able to obtain it… and then choose not to.
In Star Wars: Return of the Jedi, Luke can strike down his father. He has the power. He is seconds away.
But he sees what that path leads to — and steps back.
That choice defines him.
If the Emperor had simply stopped him, the moment would have meant nothing.
The Villain Makes the Opposite Choice
The antagonist also has two options:
-
Embrace the want
-
Confront the deeper need
But they don’t learn. They don’t grow.
In Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Elsa reaches for the Grail even as the ground collapses beneath her. She cannot let go.
Indiana Jones can.
That’s the difference.

Where Most Writers Go Wrong
They:
-
Let the hero win by luck
-
Remove the want so there’s no real decision
-
Never clearly establish the deeper need
-
Tell the reader who is good instead of showing it
The final act should never feel convenient.
It should feel earned.
A Practical Step You Can Take Today
Open your manuscript and answer this:
In the final act, does my protagonist consciously choose their need over their want?
If not, your ending may lack emotional weight.
Then ask:
-
Was the need hinted at in the first act?
-
Did the journey teach them why the want is hollow?
-
Does the villain make the opposite decision?
If you can’t clearly see those threads — strengthen them.
The Hidden Structure of Meaningful Stories
In many powerful stories, the protagonist’s need is quietly stated early on.
In The Last Crusade, Indy believes he’s chasing artifacts. But what he truly longs for is his father’s respect.
That need is there from the beginning.
The Grail was never the point.
The relationship was.
When he lets go of the Grail, he gains what he truly needed.
That’s not coincidence.
That’s design.
Why This Matters
Readers don’t come to stories just for spectacle.
They come to watch someone stand at a crossroads — and choose wisely.
We are drawn to characters who learn.
Who grow.
Who walk away from the thing they thought would complete them.
Because somewhere inside, we hope to do the same.
If you understand want vs. need, you won’t just write stronger endings.
You’ll write stories that feel true.
And those are the ones readers remember.
you might be interested in these blogs…
UNDERSTANDING CHARACTER ARCS IN YOUR NOVEL
HERE IS THE GOLDEN RULE WHEN WRITING A NOVEL
WHY SOMEONE GIVES UP ON YOUR NOVEL AND HOW TO STOP IT
