Origins - Storytelling Workshop

Each of us has a story about who we are and why. Often we have several. These stories express what we believe we can do and who we believe we can be. They define who we think we are.
Is your 'life story' a sad tale of disappointment and woe, in which you feature as the victim? Or are you featured as the hero?
Humans are storytelling creatures. We make sense of the world through telling 'stories' about it. And we make sense of our own lives by telling a story about ourselves.
"I was born in such and such a place, in the hard times that followed such and such an event, and my parents struggled to raise their kids. I was the youngest, and they didn't have much time for me, and my dad wasn't home much anyway, so I rather ran wild..." and so on.

Life stories do contain some facts
Of course, some of our personal story is also grounded in fact. You can usually determine 'facts' like when you were born, or how many children there were in the family, and in what order they were born, and where the family lived or how they supported themselves. 
But the rest of it, the story of what the facts mean, what they say about us, we make up. We build an interpretation of events constructed out of what we think we remember and our emotional response to those supposed memories. The word 'supposed' is used deliberately. It's illuminating to attend a family event where everybody is reminiscing. They 'remember' the same events very differently - sometimes to the point of punches being thrown.


The consequences of an unfairly biased life story
The story we tell about ourselves matters, because this is our 'identity', a deep part of our sense of who we are. And so the content of the story matters too. If you are telling yourself a story about what a failure you are (because this is your interpretation of those supposed memories), this isn't going to make you feel very good about yourself. And if you don't feel good about yourself, how can you make the most of your life?
A story about your inadequacies, moreover, isn't necessarily a story you made up all by yourself. People who have had a harsh upbringing, where they were constantly criticized and put down and told they would 'never amount to anything', often tell themselves a story of being a failure not because they know this to be true but because that's what they heard all the time. So they're telling themselves someone else's story about them.

The consequence is the same. Because they believe the story, they don't go for opportunities that come their way, they hold themselves back, they don't believe that good things can ever come to them, so they don't even try. And, of course, that confirms the truth of the story, so they believe it even more, and many good things that they could have had pass them by. It's tragic.

An important step in personal change is becoming aware of how one’s current story is dysfunctional. Some stories work for us and some simply do not. The master storyteller is our inner voice, not our public voice. To change how we operate in the world, we have to get the inner voice to craft a different story. It is invariably our inner voice that enables us to justify the dysfunctional story that we are now perpetuating. This process is called “Facing the Truth” and is indispensable in crafting a new story that is founded on truth, takes us where we want to go and inspires hope-filled action. --Jim Loehr

But the good news is that, whatever happened to you in your life so far, however sad and downbeat your story, you are not stuck for ever with a life story that imprisons you.
You can write a story that liberates you.












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