You’re not under-explaining your memoir.
You’re over-explaining it.
That’s the problem.
Most writers assume that if something isn’t landing, it needs more detail.
- More background.
- More context.
- More explanation of what it meant.
So they add it.
And the writing gets heavier — not clearer.
What you think you’re doing
You’re trying to help the reader.
You want them to:
- Understand the situation
- See why it matters
- Not miss anything important
So you explain.
What the reader actually experiences
They slow down.
The moment gets delayed.
The impact softens.
The writing starts to feel dense.
Not because the story is weak.
Because the experience is being explained instead of felt.
Where over-explaining shows up
It usually appears in the same places:
1. Before the moment
You explain the situation before showing it.
The reader hasn’t experienced anything yet — but they’re already being told what it means.
2. After the moment
You explain what just happened.
Instead of letting it land.
3. Inside the moment
You interrupt the scene to clarify.
The reader is pulled out of it.
Nothing looks obviously wrong.
But the writing loses impact.
Why you can’t see it
Because you already know the story.
You know:
- Who people are
- What’s about to happen
- Why it matters
So when something is only half on the page, you don’t notice.
You fill in the gaps automatically.
The reader can’t.
The simple shift
Instead of asking:
“Have I explained this enough?”
Ask:
“Has the reader experienced this yet?”
If the answer is no:
- Move the moment forward
- Cut the explanation
- Let the experience come first
Then — if needed — add meaning after.
What this changes
When you remove over-explaining:
- The writing becomes lighter
- The scene lands faster
- The reader stays inside the moment
Nothing dramatic.
But everything works better.
The problem underneath
Over-explaining isn’t really about explanation.
It’s about control.
You’re trying to make sure the reader understands.
But the result is that they feel less.
If your memoir feels heavier than it should
This is usually where to look.
Not the story.
Not the sentences.
The way the experience is being delivered.
I’ve broken down the underlying issue here: Why your memoir feels flat even when the story matters
If you want to see exactly where over-explaining is weakening your own draft, send 500–1,000 words: