Writing it down

Posted by  Robyn —October 1, 2007
Filed in Business storytelling

Given my publicly confessed reluctance to begin blogging you might be surprised to find me a strong supporter of the written word. The pleasure for me in creating elaborate photo albums for my family lies in the extensive journalling that accompanies the pictures on the page. My frustration with the pile of black and white photos I inherited from my mother was a direct result of finding no clue as to who is in the photo or where it was taken. Worse still was finding a tiny scrap of information in the cryptic words “Our Alf, 1944″ or ” John’s baptism, 1951″. So I’ve overcompensated by making sure that I have told as many of our family stories as possible. Just not in public.

But it might not be privacy issues that keep you from writing. Kerry Patterson, one of the authors of “Crucial conversations: tools for talking when stakes are high”, addresses the Power of the Pen in his August newsletter. You can also download it as an MP3 or podcast.

Maybe we’re reluctant to express ourselves in writing because our first attempts to capture our thoughts and dreams typically fell under the chilling gaze of the grammarians who accused us of dangling our modifiers and splitting our infinitives when all we really wanted to do was tell our story and have someone read it.

He contends that writing is simply not our medium of choice any more and that’s a pity because it is still a powerful tool for influence. His article is worth reading for the powerful story he tells of how quickly and well the Maya people, an indigenous people of Central America, understood the value of the written word once it became available to them.

About  Robyn

Comments

  1. Giovanni Ebono says:

    Shawn, I seek permission to use the data, information, knowledge diagram you posted to your site while discussing the Making Meaning in Organisations symposium last year. I am writing a white paper for a client of mine in Sydney.
    Could you please let me know the copyright attached to that diagram?
    In anticipation, thanks

  2. Shawn says:

    Hi Giovanni, sure thing. Just cite the source as this website, http://www.anecdote.com.au

  3. …if you think it – ink it!

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