[Editor's note: Introducing our very first recurrent blog feature -- Storytelling: Think&Do. In this weekly feature, Norah Dooley contemplates theoretical and practical aspects of storytelling. Each post includes an exercise to get you applyin' some of that theory from the comfort of your own home! Enjoy.]
Storytelling: Think&Do
Storytelling as a 21st Century Skill
by Norah Dooley
Storytelling: Think&Do
Storytelling as a 21st Century Skill
by Norah Dooley
Author's note: I intend to make my reflections on the art of storytelling and an exercise a weekly feature here. And I welcome comments and lively discussion. Please join in!
Think&Do 1.0 "Time+tragedy=comedy." Or does it?
I've loved this bromide since I first heard it from Laura Love, a singer-songwriter in her introduction to Voices, a beautiful song about her mother's mental illness. Time+tragedy = comedy. Is this more cliché than true? Or is comedy the surest indicator that we are on the other side of tragedy?
I just finished a workshop for a nonprofit group that wants to work with victims of domestic violence. This workshop naturally raised the issue that often comes up at our story slams: Can I tell a sad story? Can I tell my sad story? Yes! Does my story need to be funny? No. Do you need to have distance from your pain? Yes.
I just finished a workshop for a nonprofit group that wants to work with victims of domestic violence. This workshop naturally raised the issue that often comes up at our story slams: Can I tell a sad story? Can I tell my sad story? Yes! Does my story need to be funny? No. Do you need to have distance from your pain? Yes.
In many situations, it is wonderful and healing to work
through our stories together -- but as an art or as paid entertainment it is a huge no-no. In
fact, anywhere your listener has not agreed to the role of a caring and patient
listener, this kind of storytelling is discouraged.
In a story slam situation, I ask the storyteller, "Do you bring something to
the audience or are you asking them for something?" People get paid big bucks to listen to you ramble – they are
trained therapists. But an audience expects a work of art and should never be asked to try to make
sense out of your life. That is
your job.
As human beings, we make sense of our experience through story. An artist/storyteller does this work BEFORE they take the stage. Often, with each telling, our understanding and insight into our own experience deepens. This is the beauty of any true art, for the practitioner gains as well as the recipient.
As human beings, we make sense of our experience through story. An artist/storyteller does this work BEFORE they take the stage. Often, with each telling, our understanding and insight into our own experience deepens. This is the beauty of any true art, for the practitioner gains as well as the recipient.
Writer Judith Barrington acknowledges this experience in the quote below. Judith teaches memoir writing and wrote the award winning book, Lifesaving: A Memoir. In it she reflects on the accidental death of both her parents when she
was 19 years old and how, as a very young woman, she dealt with sudden loss and coming
of age. When asked how she worked through difficult emotions on the
page Judith Barrington said:
“ I didn’t work through the emotions on the page; I worked through them before I started to write the book. It took years for me to be ready. I don’t believe that writing in any genre is a substitute for therapy (or deep thought or journaling or however you deal with life’s blows)—even though you may get new insights into your experience in the process of writing the memoir.”
For her readers and for Judith, the resulting work of art was
worth the wait.
This Week's Exercise: Think&Do 1.0
The 5 Whys
- State what your story is about in one or two sentences. Ask
yourself (or have a friend ask you), "Why are you telling me this?" Answer with the first thing that comes into to your head. Answer "why" with your first thought 5 times, in rapid succession. You may also try this as a writing exercise. Doing it a few times will make easier to tell if you are ready to share your story.
Adapted from from The Five Whys Technique by Olivier Serrat:
“Three key elements to effective use of the Five Whys technique: (i) accurate
and complete statements of problems, 5 (ii) complete honesty in answering the
questions, (iii) the determination to get to the bottom of problems and resolve
them. The technique was developed by Sakichi Toyoda for the Toyota Industries Corporation.” www.adb.org/publications/five-whys-technique
Great 50 minute live set of Laura Love Band here: http://youtu.be/BxroVyOi5eQ

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