Why Do You Want to Reunite with That Special Person? Tell Your Story

Comments (2)

Pipl is a well-regarded “people search engine” that helps folks find other folks.

A section of Pipl that collects stories asks users to “Tell us your story and explain why is it really important for you to reunite with the person you’re looking for.” pipl.gif Definitely an interesting idea, and the collected stories linked from the left side of the site are fascinating — but they don’t seem to explain the importance for the storytellers to reunite with the person they’re looking for. Instead, they are more like testimonials for Pipl and how the site has helped bring reunions about.

But they’re still fascinating stories — of finding a mother after four years, learning that a best friend had died, finding an ex-boyfriend who had the storyteller’s college diploma in his possession, reconnecting with a brother lost for seven years.

Just as an aside, although Pipl searches the “deep Web,” I’m not sure how effective it is since no “advanced search” feature is in evidence. If you’re searching for someone with a common name, you can’t enter a middle name, for example, or a birth year.

If I were to tell a story about how satisfying a reunion can be, I’d tell about finding my childhood best friend, Claudia, whom I haven’t seen in about 45 years but am now in touch with. Over the last year or so, I’ve had some social-media-powered wonderful reunions with old friends, former students, and others — all more or less through Facebook. If I were to tell a story about the importance of finding someone, I’d tell about my high-school boyfriend. Not because I have any great need to reconnect with him, but because he so mysteriously disappeared just a few years after graduation. His parents have never been able to find him, and I’d love them to have some peace if they’re still living. Oh, what the heck, I’ll throw his name out there — William Scott Carson (he went by “Scott”), last seen in the Santa Barbara area in the mid-70s.

2 Comments

Yasni.com is another really good resource for this purpose. It tracks more sources online than any other people search engine, and returns detailed findings for more than one billion people on the Web.

Good luck!

Thanks, John. I took a look at Yasni, and it looks very interesting.

Leave a comment


Type the characters you see in the picture above.

About
A Storied Career

A Storied Career explores intersections/synthesis among various forms of
Applied Storytelling:
  • journaling
  • blogging
  • organizational storytelling
  • storytelling for identity construction
  • storytelling in social media
  • storytelling for job search and career advancement.
  • ... and more.
A Storied Career's scope is intended to appeal to folks fascinated by all sorts of traditional and postmodern uses of storytelling. Read more ...


Subscribe to A Storied Career in a reader

EmailIcon.gif
Subscribe to A Storied Career by Email

About
Dr. Kathy Hansen

Kathy Hansen, PhD, is a leading proponent of deploying storytelling for career advancement. She is an author and instructor, in addition to being a career guru. More... emailicon.jpeg

Email me

<
Berrrett-Koeher Publishers - 20% Off All Books & Links




Now Available!
Free E-Book
:

Storied Careers: 40+ Story Practitioners Talk about Applied Storytelling

StoriedCareersCover


Click here to go to download page.
 
Storytelling
Tweets in the
Twitterverse
« »




Pages

The following are sections of A Storied Career where I maintain regularly updated running lists of various items of interest to followers of storytelling:

TwitterStoryFollowList.jpg
story_events_small.jpg
story_wisdom_small.jpg
story_writings_smaller.jpg
storytellers_small.jpg
story_practitioners_small.jpg

Links below are to Q&A interviews with story practitioners.


The pages below relate to learning from my PhD program focusing on a specific storytelling seminar in 2005. These are not updated but still may be of interest:

Tags

September 2010

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30    

Shameless Plugs and Self-Promotion

Katharine Hansen
My Teaching Portfolio

KatharineHansenPhD.com

My PhD Page

twit8.png


Personal Twitter Account My personal Twitter account: @kat_hansen
Here are tweets from my personal account:


« »
AStoriedCareer Twitter account My storytelling Twitter account: @AStoriedCareer

KatCareerGal Twitter account My careers Twitter account: @KatCareerGal


View my page on
Worldwide Story Work

Kathy Hansen's Facebook profile

resume-writing service

Quintessential Careers

QuintZine

My Books

Cool Folks
to Work With

Find Your Way Coaching

Brandego


career advice blogs member


Blogcritics: news and reviews
Geeky Speaky: Submit Your Site!



Storytelling Books