Guest Entry: Storytelling that Ruins Relationships

Comments (7)

Stumbled across this article on a free content site (content4reprint.com). I’m a little wary of the author, Melani Ward (pictured below), as she seems almost “anti-story.” In her Changing Your Story Blog, she calls herself a “storybuster.” To her, that means breaking through stories that keep people (especially women entrepreneurs) stuck. It’s not so different from my “change your story, change your life” philosophy. I present her guest article in the interest of offering diverse viewpoints:

Storytelling that Ruins Relationships: What Stories Are You Telling About Other People?

By Melani Ward

I love stories. I love reading them, listening to them, talking about them and creating them. But, for a long time, I used to use the stories I told about OTHER people to make me feel better. Crazy huh? Well it’s true. I was what I now call the quintessential “I’ve Got YOUR Story Straight” Storyteller. melaniward.jpg Now I don’t necessarily want to go telling a story about you right now but I would bet that you have first hand knowledge of this storyteller.

This is the person who has your whole life figured out. She will tell you what you should do, how you should feel and what everything you say, think and feel means. You may hear something like this from this storyteller, “If you would just do ___, you would be so much happier.”

These storytellers usually mean well, in fact I rarely meet any who don’t, it’s just that they have a hard time keeping their ideas to themselves and what they define as help more often than not comes across as patronizing and quite irritating actually. The truth is most of the time these people want to help you or “fix” your situation because if they do, it makes them feel better.

If you are the “I’ve Got You Story Straight” storyteller, you probably have some pretty good ideas about what the people in your life should be doing differently in order to be happier, healthier, fitter, or more likeable, right?

Well, here’s the deal — what you think doesn’t matter.

And to steal a phrase from one of my friends and a totally cool chick Marie Forleo, “nobody made you manager of the world.” It’s none of your business how someone else thinks, feels, or acts.

Let me give you a quick example. I had a friend many years ago who I loved very much but I was not the best at showing it. You see as far as I was concerned she made all of the wrong decisions when it came to men.

(As if I had it all figured out myself, right?) She would say she wanted one thing and then do something that made getting the thing she said she wanted virtually impossible. It drove me nutty and I used to have a whole bunch of advice I was more than happy to dole out, even when she never asked.

The story I was telling about her was that she was not happy or that she could be happy if she just chose a different path. But who was I to say if she was happy or not?

This person is the way she is because of the people who raised her, her environment and her experiences. And she can only be exactly as she is just as I can only be exactly as I am. It not only wasn’t fair of me to expect her to behave, think or feel differently, it also wasn’t fair of me to put that kind of energy on her. I was putting her somewhere (in unhappy land) that she didn’t deserve to be.

One of the challenges for me was that people would come to me a lot and ask me for my thoughts or opinions so I got used to it and decided that since they wanted it than everyone else must have wanted it too. Not true.

But, I truly learned to stop telling stories when I moved away from home. I love my dad very much but we did not have the world’s best relationship when I was growing up. It wasn’t that we ever fought or didn’t get along. It was just that I had such a hard time understanding him that it made it difficult to get close. However, when I moved away, the space gave me the freedom to let go of the stories I was telling about him. I realized that I was trying to do the impossible — understand what it was like to be him and therefore understand how he acted. But, I was never going to understand.

I’d never understand what it was like to go to work as a young kid to help support my family. I’d never understand what it was like to have to pay for everything in my life including college and graduate school. I’d never understand what it was like to have parents who did not support me and encourage me every minute of my life. And I most certainly could not understand what it was like to watch my 8-year-old daughter fight for her life every day for two and a half years.

But that was the whole trick — I wasn’t supposed to understand. I was just supposed to have compassion and let him BE. Once I did that, our relationship blossomed. In letting go, I created an opportunity for what really mattered to flow in, which has been a gift for both of us.

The real lesson here is that it’s never our business to tell stories about anyone else. So, the next time your mom starts lamenting her worries or your best friend starts complaining about her current loser boyfriend/husband or your brother complains about his lame job, just listen. Just open your heart and show compassion for wherever they happen to be at that moment. If they want advice, they’ll ask. You’ll be amazed at the results.

Find out what storyteller might be keeping you stuck at Changing Your Story Blog. Melani Ward is a multi-passionate entrepreneur: numerologist, marketer, lifestyle coach, writer, and athlete! She helps women entrepreneurs attract ideal clients and a lot of money doing work they LOVE.

7 Comments

Kathy-

This article has nothing to do with storytelling. I am lost. A self-help post? The author refers to a nosy, busy-body, do-gooder as a storyteller? What does this have to do with the power of storytelling? Being a control-freak qualifies as bad storytelling?

Gossip, whines and manipulation are not storytelling traits.

The only paragraph I can even remotely find connected to storytelling is the one that begins with: "The real lesson here is that it’s never our business to tell stories about anyone else."

I think this is a classic example of someone latching on to the word "storytelling" as a fad word, hoping for more blog hits. Sigh. As you know, there is rampant misinformation about the definitions of storytelling and its uses. Maybe you are tyring to illustrate that by posting this?

There are many people using storytelling as healing and for relationship building. This doesn't highlight that at all.

You know that I am a fan of your blog, but this really doesn't match the fantastic quality of your normal blog postings.

Sorry you didn't like the post Sean.

I think reading the author's blog gives a greater sense of her concept of storytelling: She feels that getting "stuck" in certain stories keeps people from reaching their goals.

As for me and this blog, I guess when one blogs 365 days a year, one is bound to lay an egg on occasion.

Nah, I'm just one voice- my like or dislike mean nothing. And, I have more than my share of eggs. LoL. Come dig through my blogs and there is plenty to scramble in there.

Just adding to the conversation. But it does illustrate that people really don't understand what story and storytelling really are. She uses "story" to talk about the self-talk we called "tapes" back in the 70's.

We lost the definition of story a long time ago. It's a free-for-all now.

Thanks!

I've found in conducting my Q&As that for some practitioners, the definition of "story" is really important; for others, it's not important at all.

Once, when I was "putting a bird" in the oven for dinner, I could not get the meal in the oven. It wouldn't fit. The meat was too large!

It turns out that the definition of the word "chicken" does not include "ostrich." But, hey, why be concerned about knowing the difference?

However, we did make really nice hats out of the tailfeathers of the "bird" that didn't fit in the oven. Those hats were really hard to eat. So, I have decided that I will never eat chicken again. I am now a "bird buster."

I am spending too much time on the Internet today. Off to the grocery store. To buy cabbages.

This is a fascinating thread. You have me thinking. In all my years I've never had anyone make such a distinction between the stories we tell ourselves and telling an actual story. (Not sure I understand from your comments as to the benefit of doing this though.)

I know people who focus on actually telling stories such as Annette Simmons and then those who talk about stories in other ways - the stories we tell about ourselves and about others - like Byron Katie, Carol Pearson, and Jim Loehr do.

Still it's wonderful getting a different perspective on what people do and think.

Thanks.

Melani Ward

Thanks for stopping by, Melani, and thanks for the article.

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