I think it would would be better - for you, and for the story, especially given your organizational bent - if you started over completely. Leave the old story up, start the new one alongside, and let the two run concurrently until you're sure the new has subsumed the old.
But I'm really not sure how you edit. Maybe it will help to go room by room, and color/cross them out on your flow chart as you finish them (in which case it makes sense to edit the existing story).
Will having the "old" story for side-by-side comparison help?
Will it help morale/motivation/organization to go room by room, editing, crossing them out one by one on your flow chart?
I see those as the two questions to answer, and if you can't decide that way, keep the old one and start a new one. The old story will provide an "archive" of sorts, and as you write the new material, you won't be bound as much by the preceding text (though you'll still have it for reference). If it's not just a matter of punctuation and minor word changes - if you can confront that blank space and write the rooms without the "frame" of what you did in the first place - start a new story. And copy/paste as necessary
I wish I had the kind of dedication it takes to create a flow chart of your story like that, btw - never mind the actual writing process. That's a gift, or at least a certain strength of character.
But I'm really not sure how you edit. Maybe it will help to go room by room, and color/cross them out on your flow chart as you finish them (in which case it makes sense to edit the existing story).
Will having the "old" story for side-by-side comparison help?
Will it help morale/motivation/organization to go room by room, editing, crossing them out one by one on your flow chart?
I see those as the two questions to answer, and if you can't decide that way, keep the old one and start a new one. The old story will provide an "archive" of sorts, and as you write the new material, you won't be bound as much by the preceding text (though you'll still have it for reference). If it's not just a matter of punctuation and minor word changes - if you can confront that blank space and write the rooms without the "frame" of what you did in the first place - start a new story. And copy/paste as necessary
I wish I had the kind of dedication it takes to create a flow chart of your story like that, btw - never mind the actual writing process. That's a gift, or at least a certain strength of character.
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