If you were to take everything that is important in my life
and, metaphorically, toss it into a pot and boil it down, the resultant essence
would be: the value of Story. For some reason, I've been feeding on that thought lately. It's that idea which has been resonating
through everything I did yesterday, on that first day of the new year. Let me
see if I can reconstruct that smörgåsbord for you.
At our house, we launched that first day of 2015 as easily
as possible. While we didn’t close out the old year with any of the traditional
season’s reveling, it was still nice to sleep in. After all, we have a college
student who, having just returned from Ireland, is still trying to catch up on
sleep—and an extra eight hours of time zone lacking from her accustomed norm.
So, what does one do when the first meal of the day is too
late for breakfast, but too early for lunch? Head to a favorite restaurant for
a holiday brunch.
Over a leisurely meal, conversation ebbed and flowed. The
stories only gradually made their appearance—as if by osmosis, they would fill
the void to achieve equilibrium between teller and audience. While others may
chat about the latest episode on their favorite sitcom or soap opera—or even
critique what they had to drink at their latest party—our mealtime conversations
seldom go in those directions. There are simply too many thoughts to discuss. Ideas
to explore. And, of course, there are the stories.
Stories are funny things. Some are audacious. Some are
flamboyant. Others are demure, or need just the right setting to seep out. Some
are meant to be nibbled. Or sipped. Or relished after properly cleansing the
palate from all other disturbances.
As storytelling goes, if it were up to my side of the
family, we’d get together in a big huddle and, splat, out would come the
stories. The full everything. We’d talk and talk until we were all talked out.
And then there would be no words left.
That’s not how my husband does it. A story is a centerpiece
in some ways. But it doesn’t always make an immediate appearance. If I were to
go somewhere exciting and upon my return, you were to ask me, “So, how did it
go?” I would immediately begin to tell you the whole tale. If, on the other
hand, it were my husband who had that experience, I know that I would not hear
the entire tale in one sitting. It might take days before every story emerged
from his memory and received its proper presentation.
When it comes to sharing stories, my daughter is quite like
that. The stories have to take time to emerge. And as yesterday’s episode of
the recounting unfolded—well over a week after her return home—I couldn’t help
but think, “Who else has conversations like these?” If I could have eavesdropped
at each table in that restaurant, I doubt any would have displayed as eclectic
a source of conversation starters as did our own.
That, of course, does the worried mother no good. I wonder
how this child of the next generation will find others with such tendencies in
common—friends—but then, I remember she is
a child of this next generation, and (seemingly) surgically implanted upon
these strange new creatures is one or another device of a social media kind,
enabling them to connect and share their own stories. Those of like minds are
better equipped now to find each other than we ever were in our heyday.
Despite the generational discrepancy, you and I in the
genea-blogging world are no different, though we may tend to speak face to face
with more frequency than those of the newly-minted generations. Take our blogs,
for instance: places where you and I share our stories of family, and our
families’ nexus with history. We inspire and encourage each other with our
stories. I loved reading bloggers’ year-in-review posts—like Dara’s at Black Raven Genealogy—where researchers
reminded themselves that yes, it was a productive year, after all. Once again,
it was the stories that prompted us to remember, “Oh, yeah, that happened.”
Some bloggers—and, granted, not all of them are genealogy
bloggers, per se—zoomed in on the
aspect of Story, itself. I appreciate what computer geek John Saddington—a post-per-day
blogger now for fourteen years straight—felt most keenly about emphasizing: tell the Story.
“The Story” is happening all around us, all the time. It is
there for the asking, but we have to capture it to preserve it. Otherwise, it
vanishes as soon as our memories let it go. If we deem it to be important, we are the ones that bestow that
importance upon a story. Otherwise, if it is forgotten, of what use is a story?
Story is the detail captured while Life is happening. It’s
the crestfallen look that flashes across the face of a friend when someone
comments that he hasn’t been looking his normal self lately—while the cancer-discovery
back story provides the explanation, it’s that visceral signal that, in a split
second, drives the message home. Story is what helps us wrap our minds around history.
It infuses fervency into fact. It has the staying power that enables us to
remember what's been happening.
And remembering is the key. If we don’t have Story to pass
down to the next generation, with what tools will they preserve their heritage?
Perhaps that is why some are so insistent on emphasizing the
importance of Story. Story is our connection between the past and the future.
It’s our vehicle to capture those fleeting tokens of where life is headed—right
now—and preserve them in a form that
will still be viable in years to come.
The most important thing to remember about Story is that
everyone has one. Everyone has a Story. But not everyone will tell that Story.
Don’t be that someone.
Tell yours.
Above: "Schreibender Knabe mit Schwesterchen" ("Boy Writing, With Sister"), 1875 oil on canvas by Swiss artist Albrecht Samuel Anker; courtesy Wikipedia; in the public domain.
Above: "Schreibender Knabe mit Schwesterchen" ("Boy Writing, With Sister"), 1875 oil on canvas by Swiss artist Albrecht Samuel Anker; courtesy Wikipedia; in the public domain.
Thanks Jacqi, one thing is sure - you certainly know how to spin a good yarn!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Dara! I'm glad you like them. There is nothing like a story to help remember family--especially the extended families we genealogists find ourselves researching!
DeleteDara is right! And you can find one like nobody's business.
ReplyDeleteDon't you just love sniffing out a story?! When we connect the dots on an ancestor's life, they often lead to a story, I've found. But when they don't--especially when something smells fishy--I've found that a little more searching, especially on those historic newspaper sites, gives up the clues to patch together the tale.
DeleteYes, Tell The Story! You do such a good job in telling yours. Happy New Year, Jacqi!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Grant. I'm certain this can be the Year of the Story for you, too! Grab what you've got and run with it!
DeleteYes I love researching bits and pieces to understand the whys and the hows too?
ReplyDeleteThere is lots of information in everyones "dash" some people more than others.:)
There's a lot of profound thought over that one tiny "dash," Far Side. We try our best to capture that and preserve it--but I'm sure there is always more to understand, no matter the long or short of it.
DeleteStory telling seems to be nearly a lost art - so many people don't spend more than a moments time with each others actual physical company - and when they do, they seem to be at lost for words for where to start.
ReplyDeleteI've found that the art of asking questions becomes the corollary to the quest to tell a good story. Sometimes, people just don't know what to say--or even how to say it--but someone who can deftly place a succinct question in their path can sometimes open up those nuggets hidden deep inside and access those "lost" words.
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