-but it seems to crop up with any people who are somewhat in touch with reality, that getting people out of storytelling is nigh-impossible.
Conversation
Replying to
i'm interested to hear more about this - what do you mean by "getting people out of storytelling", and why is doing so desirable?
2
@ParadoxNow_ talks about how storytelling can be a means for transformative growth, and how stories usually have some hidden truth.
1
supports and underpins this view with his own experience & example.
I think I agree with both of those things, as stated.
1
What I'm struggling with here, is that it seems especially hard not just to get people to abandon stories (bad, for reasons I'll touch on),-
1
1
- but that getting any traction at all in changing the thrust of those stories is nigh-impossible, even with empathy & opportunity.
1
Storytelling is inextricably linked with survival. Without a story to tell, people die. No meaning -> no reason to live.
No conflict there.
1
So we need stories and I'm not saying we should get rid of those, just so we're clear. I don't think that's desirable.
2
1
there's a point at which it may desirable to ditch all. But 99.99% aren't there. Heck, I doubt I am.
1
Even if we ditched conscious stories about ourselves and others, I suspect stories/models are the underpinning of our thinking capabilities.
It may be a baseline unit of sensory processing, but one, much like fear, that you don't need to be attached to per se.
1
I feel like my own attachment to the stories (yet I'm still telling them) seems to be approaching 0, which makes them oddly hydralike.
1
Show replies


