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Wednesday, July 16, 2025

Rambling, and a Story

70°f/21°C, cloudy and humid.

 
Yesterday's project. Much sanding had to happen to smooth out 4 layers of paint. Then paint, distress, sand with fine grit, wax warmth clear wax, then dark wax, and add new knobs.

Not much doing around here of any interest, really, just the usual gardens, stringtrimming,  painting, etc. Larry went out yesterday to pick up our milk and butter, get a haircut, and pick up hardware and stuff we need to work on some furniture pieces. He enjoys getting out alone sometimes, and I enjoy the time alone here at home. Are you the same? 

It seems like since we retired, we are together pretty much 24/7.  When I was working, I had an hour commute both ways to my job, and I liked that time for thinking and planning. Sometimes I listened to audio books, or to my story practice tapes, but often I just thought.  

About what, I wonder now. I know that I often composed poems during my drives, which I would hurry to jot down when I got home, or I would come up with new story ideas. Those would percolate in my head as I worked out the telling; I seldom wrote down the stories I told. The tale would eventually emerge at a performance, fully formed---or as fully as it was possible to get it before giving it voice. I used to say that I never told a story the same way once, and that is pretty much the truth. The telling varied with the audience, the time I had, what the performer before me, if there were more than one at an event, did, etc. Sometimes I would think of a new twist to add, or take out or add details. It seemed to me thst once a story was written down, it was carved in stone and I couldn't change it. That's not true of course, and eventually several of my stories were published, but still it seemed like committing them to print kind of sucked the life out of the oral tale.

And I think that's true, to a point. When telling, I could use body language and vocal inflection to enhance the words. I needed eye contact with listeners because to me the telling wasn't so much performance as shared experience. Stage lights? Please, no, I needed to see people! Often I could react to some external event---like the man who farted, or the one who threw up, or a passing truck or train--in a way that added humor or compassion and still kept the audience engaged. So many little nuances are part of oral storytelling. How could one possibly capture those in print?

This was not at all what I meant to write about today! How one's mind does wander down unsuspected paths sometimes. Now, I must get back to doing some uninteresting thing, or maybe I will make pickles. Yes, I think that's what I will do. So to wrap up this meandering post, here's a link to one of my oral stories. And I should say, committing the story to audio felt almost the same as writing it down, like I was carving it in stone. And I did eventually get over that too, for the most part. 




Copyright Susanna Holstein. All rights reserved. No Republication or Redistribution Allowed without attribution to Susanna Holstein.

8 comments:

  1. ...today we went on a boat cruise with 40 from our church. We were about the only ciuple that sat together. Really???

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  2. Oh, the story of the headless woman made me smile at the end. Good job, Sue!

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  3. Storytelling is one of your gifts and one that I lack. You have reminded me of what I have heard about oral cultures that supposedly pass stories on intact. Apparently they don’t or at least don’t always tell the stories in the same way or at the same length.

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  4. You are a good storyteller. I could see it all as you told it.

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  5. You do a lot!
    And yes, same. Friends always think we have a fight, Ingo and I when I want a day for myself. Not at all! Just some time where I can do what I want in my time-frame, at my pace.
    Nice to learn I am not alone!
    Same again, 45 minutes drive one way to/fro work, thinking-time.
    Not really a story teller here (only true stories) - I am curious how you reacted on the farting dude?
    What a a wonderful story. And the long silver hair.... We lived with Ingo´s Granma for some time and when Ingo moved in with me in Braunschweig we sure kept visiting.
    She fell sick, we visited, her hair was open and soooo long in nearly hit the floor! She had it as a bun always. Thank you for the memory. She always greeted us with a cheerful, "my children!".
    You have a beautiful voice and I like your accent, too.
    Wonderful story! Thank you!

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  6. We actually enjoy doing things together :-) though these days we don't hold hands anymore LOL...

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  7. Time alone is very important. Both my wife and I agree on that. We both feel it actually enhances the time together. And, unlike Angie above, we still hold hands!

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  8. Such fun to listen to you telling that story! Thanks. You and Dolly have much the same cadence. But of course the connection to an audience is also what makes good comedy club groups...small audience and connecting with them. I never got the hang of that, so am glad to sit in the audience rather than be on stage! I often think what it would be like to live with another person again, and I'm positive I'd need almost a full house for myself!

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