As a storyteller, I'm very interested in geography.
When I was 14, I'd sit with my little brother and
sister as we rode in the back of the car and take a look at the
palms of their hands.
I might take Christopher's little hand and see a
blue pencil mark on it, and that would be enough to get my imagination
started. I would begin, "Once upon a time...there was a blue bird
sitting on a small box at the dump. The blue bird chirped merrily,
'Can anyone sing a song that will open the box that I'm sitting
on?' 'I can!' cried Christopher. 'I know the perfect song.' And
as Christopher began to sing a song, music came from the box and
suddenly... "
That's how I started telling stories, just looking
at my little brother's or sister's hand and letting something
get my imagination started.
Everyone's hand is a kind of land. Hands are full
of bumps, little hills, plains, dry river beds, and funny wrinkled
places...all of which can give rise to a story. My little brother
and sister loved the stories because they were always the heroes.
And that assured attention.
Very often my stories were very short, sometimes
just a minute. I'd keep looking at their hands and at their faces.
If they got bored, I'd invent a new scene, or if they started
to laugh that would be a signal to keep with that scene for a
little bit. It was all an exploration.
When you make up a hand story, you're creating a
geography, you're creating a place and places are always filled
with mystery. The nice thing about creating a story is that you
can make the geography whatever you want. You can name places
and you can make them disappear because you become MASTER OF THE
LAND. You're the storyteller, so if you want the mountains to
dance, they'll dance. Now that's geography!
Making up a story can be a little frightening because
you don't know where you're going, but that's what makes it an
adventure. Think of it more as dreaming aloud, not telling a story.
You can say to someone, "I'm going to make up a dream for you."
A dream doesn't have to come out right, it just is what it is.
That's what you want, to just give a little gift. If you think
of it as a gift and not a performance, it'll make it more fun.
When I had my own children, I made up hand stories
for them. Then I started making up stories about a leaf they might
pick up, a pebble I'd see, a cloud, or a dragonfly, or anything
at all. My children and I would make up stories driving to the
hardware store, going to the dump, or to soccer practice.
One day, my children and I made up a long detective
story using all the different stores and libraries in my town
of Marshfield, Massachusetts. We went from the library to the
Daniel Webster House and made up scenes as we walked along. That
brought the geography of our town alive in a way that nothing
had before. The story I made up was called The Gouda, and now
I hear from people from as far off as Wyoming saying they're taking
a trip to Massachusetts, and they want to drive through Marshfield
to see all of the places in the story.
Creating a story is something like wandering in
the dark. But isn't that what dreaming is? When you wander in
an unknown world, you might bump into things, you might feel stranded,or
you might feel amazed about what you come upon. Whatever happens,
you're adventuring.
So, get someone to show you the palm of their hands,
or take a leaf, a pebble, or a cloud. Look at the geography there,
and then start dreaming, and then start telling the dream.
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