How to Tell A Story Book Review by Jeff Bush

By The Moth, Meg Bowles, Catherine Burns, Jenifer Hixson, Sarah Austin Jenness and Kate Tellers

  • Stories are what turns friends into family.
  • Your stories are like fingerprints; they are unique to you.
  • Vulnerability is power when it comes to telling a story. 
  • We are all bursting with stories, dig within so find them. 
  • If you don’t feel it, your audience won’t feel it.
  • Tension keeps the audience on the edge of their seats. They want to know what is about to happen or where this story is going.
  • You are not just telling what happened in the story, you are telling why it is important.
  • How can you boil your story down into one sentence. Being able to do that will help guide in shape the story you want to tell.
  • As a storyteller, you are in charge of the journey, the scenes you show people, where you stop, what you overlook and your final destination.
  • Tell the story as if you were in it right now and feeling it.
  • Resist the urge to tell the listeners how they should feel, let them decide on their own.
  • Details make the story memorable to your listeners.
  • Emotions will connect you with your audience.
  • When telling a story, you have to take your listener somewhere. You cannot keep going around the block.
  • The ending is the last thing you say, so it can hurt your entire story.
  • Preparation is your key to confidence on the stage.
  • Let your text be a roadmap. You do not need to know every word, just know that you are going in the right direction.
  • Although you do not need to memorize your entire speech, you should memorize or know super well the opening and closing.
  • Repetition can be a spotlight. It can help the audience remember and know what is important.
  • There is no need for big words or flowery talk. Speak like you talk and not like you would read.
  • Stories should feel off the cuff, but they should not be off the cuff. Prepare, practice, and rehearse. 
  • See it in your mind as you are telling it and it will help in your delivery. 
  • As long as you are willing to be vulnerable, you have a story to tell.
  • Find a way to calm your nerves, whatever works for you. 
  • You are much more likely to remember a fact if it is wrapped up in a story.

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