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Home » Article » Internet-and-Businesses-Online Storytelling for Fun and Profit
Alvah Parker filed under "Internet-and-Businesses-Online"
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Storytelling for Fun and Profit
Storytelling - It’s a hot topic these days. What do I mean by
storytelling? One website says that it is “a narrative account
of a real or imagined event or events” That same website
(http://www.eldrbarry.net/roos/st_defn.htm) says “Stories
connect us with our humanness and link past, present, and future
by teaching us to anticipate the possible consequences of our
actions.”
Once a month I read to a local first grade. The children get
very excited when they see me because they know we will spend a
wonderful hour together using our imaginations. We do that by
looking at the pictures in the book and then making up a story
to go with them. Sometimes I stop in the middle of the story and
ask them what they think is going to happen. When I read the
poem Casey at the Bat, they preferred their ending with Casey
hitting a home run!
Aside from its entertainment value stories help us to connect to
others. There is a certain amount of shared intimacy when one
person shares a story with another. In addition to that some
stories help a person to learn something new. Business leaders
are just beginning to see storytelling as a way to deal with
change. It can be used to produce a practical outcome that
changes an individual, a community and/or an organization.
A story is told about a student and his master. Everyday the
student spent learning from his master. The student noticed that
the master always taught him through stories so one day he asked
the master if it wouldn’t be faster if the master taught him
directly. The master responded by asking the student to bring
him some water. The student thought this response was odd but
dutifully got a pot and filled it with water for his master.
Seeing the pot of water, the master asked the student why he
brought him the pot when all he asked for was water.
To me that story says so much more than a direct answer and that
is just the point of the story, isn’t it?
How does one gain the insight necessary to find just the right
story? I always envy musicians and actors in their ability to
improvise. A jazz musician for example can pick up the melody
and improvise wonderful variations. Actors in the same way can
get the barest of facts and then create a monologue or dialogue
right in the moment. To me improvisation is amazing! I am in awe
of those who do it.
Creating something in the moment is a skill to cultivate if one
wants to use the art of storytelling effectively. As a child I
remember that at camp we used to sit in a circle and the
counselor would start a story. In the middle of the story
(sometimes in mid-sentence) she would stop and the person beside
her would continue the story. Each person in the circle would
add to the story until the last person got to end the story. I
haven’t done that in years but what a great exercise to flex the
storytelling muscle!
Recently I listened to a wonderful interview between Dovid
Grossman (www.DovidGrossman.com) and Jack Canfield
(www.JackCanfield.com). Both men had stories to share and the
conversation went back and forth very much like a dance. One way
to learn to tell a good story is to listen to great storytellers.
I’m planning to hone my storytelling skills by participating in
a teleclass called The Hero’s Journey for Parents with Dovid
Grossman, a rabbi, youth leader and father of nine children and
Christopher Vogler, author of The Writer’s Journey. What child
doesn’t like to hear stories about his/her growing up years! My
grandchildren at 2 and 5 already love to hear about what they
did as babies. For more information on the program go to
www.HerosJourneyForParents.com.
Whether you are a business leader, a parent, or a student,
connecting with others and learning through a powerful story can
be rewarding and fun. Learning the art of storytelling is a
skill we all will need to develop in the 21st century.
About Alvah Parker Alvah Parker is a Business and Career Coach
as well as publisher of Parker’s Points, an email tip list and
Road to Success, an ezine. Parker’s Value Program© enables her
clients to find their own way to work that is more fulfilling
and profitable. Her clients are managers, business owners, sole
practioners, attorneys and people in transition. Alvah is found
on the web at www.asparker.com. She may also be reached at
781-598-0388.
About the author:
About Alvah Parker Alvah Parker is a Business and Career Coach
as well as publisher of Parker’s Points, an email tip list and
Road to Success, an ezine. Parker’s Value Program© enables her
clients to find their own way to work that is more fulfilling
and profitable. Her clients are managers, business owners, sole
practioners, attorneys and people in transition. Alvah is found
on the web at www.asparker.com. She may also be reached at
781-598-0388.
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