Showing posts with label Storytelling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Storytelling. Show all posts

06 March 2014

The New Fireside? Social Media and Storytelling

You may tell a tale that takes up residence in someone's soul, becomes their blood and self and purpose. That tale will move them and drive them and who knows that they might do because of it, because of your words. That is your role, your gift.
~ Erin Morgenstern, The Night Circus


Beginning in January, I am participating in the One Page a Day Challenge.  Hopefully by the end of the year, I'll have 365 pages worth editing.  I’m also trying to follow My Plan for 2014.  I may need therapy by December.  Oh wait…


T
his week, I’ve been talking about the social media fasting trend, offering a different perspective.

Today I would like to look at this trend from yet another angle – that of storytelling.

It is part of the very nature of stories that they be shared.  You could argue that your story ~ your experience ~ by itself, teaches you and forms you.  But that would be a very boring story.

Because the most exciting stories involve more than one person: a protagonist, an antagonist, and a situation that throws them together.  Now you have two stories: the one from the POV of the protagonist and one from the POV of the antagonist.

But wait.

There is also the stories of the people that the protagonist has come in contact with and the those of the people surrounding the antagonist.  Those stories also touch the current one, informing it, changing it, possibly ending it.

The Sociability of Stories
In one of my favorite movies, V for Vendetta, the main character, V, played by Hugo Weaving, tells Natalie Portman’s character, Evey:
"Artists use lies to tell the truth. Yes, I created a lie. But because you believed it, you found something true about yourself."
This is the essence of storytelling ~ they are meant to be told because both the teller and the listener gain from the telling.  Anyone who has ever sat in a support group of any kind knows this.  Keeping a story locked away inside of you ~ whether it is your personal story or someone else’s ~ is suffocating for both you and the story.

There has never been anyone like us onstage before.  And there will be no one like us after we have made our final bows.  The voice, the passion, the angst, and the ecstasy that we bring to our stories is unique ~ and needed.  Someone may find their truth in our stories.

But they can only find it if we share those stories.

Storytelling on Social Media
Stories were traditionally handed down orally.  Usually around a fire, people would gather to hear stories of brave deeds, tragic deaths, lessons learned, entertaining and informing the rapt listeners.

The Boyhood of Raleigh
Sir John Everett Millais, 1870
It’s only been since the invention of the printing press that stories come to us printed on a page.  And now, with the invention of the eReader, stories come to us “printed’ on a digital page.

We no longer huddle around a fire, listening to an itinerant storyteller; we hunch over our smartphones, “liking” and “sharing” one another's stories.  As I said yesterday, we could choose to use the tool of social media to post, click, and upload stupid, inane things. 

But it doesn’t have to be like that.  The choice is ours.

What kind of story will you share today?

Oremus pro invicem,
~ Mikaela

How do you share your stories?  Will you join me in sharing insightful stories this month?


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04 December 2013

A Pin is Worth a Thousand Words: Finding the Narrative



But there's a story behind everything. How a picture got on a wall. How a scar got on your face. Sometimes the stories are simple, and sometimes they are hard and heartbreaking.
~ Mitch Albom, For One More Day

In December, I am continuing (barely) to participate in the Two Pages-a-Day writing challenge.  And trying desperately to get in a holiday mood.


N
arratives can be found anywhere.

The other night I had a dream that was literally a narrative.  There were two characters walking towards me as if towards a camera, and narrating away like my dream was a Nat Geo docudrama.

Those are the days I wish I slept hooked up to a sci-fi machine that could transcribe your dreams as they’re happening.  On the other hand, this also might be rather terrifying for the people reading them.  Or titillating.  Depends on what I read, ate, or watched before going to bed.

But not all stories come from dreams.  Sometimes, they come from Pinterest.

A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words…Literally
Or to be more specific, a picture I saw on Pinterest.

Because let’s be honest, all of us who have been sucked into the black hole that is Pinterest know we spend way too much time drooling over Dream Homes, Dream Vacations, Ideal Bathrooms, and Healthy Recipes to Reach Our  Ideal Weight.

All while munching on a carbalicious cupcake in a dimly lit, 1980s creeptastic kitchen, in a ratty bathrobe.

And that’s when the real magic happens.

Image credit: Pinterest
Take this picture.

Normal people see a beautiful scene and think, “Ahhh, I would love to travel to Portugal some day….”

Not me.  Nooooo.  I saw it and thought:
Enjoy your stay in a romantic bed and breakfast, with a breathtaking view.  What you don’t know is that the room is so cramped, that only a small cot fits in there along with the romantically placed table and chairs.  Said chairs turn your butt into a numb pile of ricotta cheese, and one chair leg bent in half the first time you sat on it.  And then there is smog and car fumes drifting in through the window.  Which causes you to choke on the hard roll and tar-like coffee that passes for breakfast in Europe.
See?  Narrative.  Snarky, MST3K narrative, but narrative nonetheless.

Now, I could have chosen to take this narrative in a completely different direction.  Perhaps this is the hotel room of a potential murder victim.  Or of a woman trying to get over heartbreak or trauma. You are only limited by your imagination.

And possibly the amount of snark brought on by what you dreamed about or just ate.

Oremus pro invicem,
~ Mikaela

What narratives do you see around you right now?  Keep a watch out ~ they’re happening all the time!

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