,

Storytelling tips

Jay O’Callahan writes:

When my own children were young they would ask me at dinner to “tell when you were bad, Daddy.” Recalling small things that happened to me as a boy allowed them to have fun but also to see that I, too, was small and worried and hurt and naughty. Suddenly, I was no longer just “Daddy” but a friend sharing a world they knew.
When my son was a third grader, he used to come home each day telling ordinary stories about his teacher. “Mr. McCurdy is making Portuguese bread again tonight. It’s an egg bread and sticky. He had to answer the phone last night just when both hands were covered with a sticky mess. . .” Or, “Mr. McCurdy doesn’t like New York City. His wife has to hold on to him on the sidewalk there ’cause he gets terribly dizzy.”
We are all human – and stories remind us of our humanity, our sense of fun and wonder and struggle. The stories you begin to collect can be personal, folk, adventure, mystery. It depends on you, your students, your interests and theirs. But tell them, tell them, tell them.

in an article 16 Storytelling Tips for the Tellerwhich is not only hugely valuable for storytellers, for speakers using stories, but also for improving public speaking itself.