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How to Tell Stories to Children
How to Tell Stories to Children
29 episodes
5 months ago
From the authors of How to Tell Stories to Children comes a podcast that supports parents, teachers, and grandparents who want to engage in the intimacy and excitement of storytelling at home. Our work has been endorsed by Dr. Jane Goodall, New York Times bestselling authors and parenting guides Steve Biddulph, Kim John Payne, Bill McKibben, Richard Rohr, Charles Eisenstein, and many more. Warning! This is not a collection of children's stories. It's about empowerment. It is about finding your voice. We combine the science of storytelling with a step-by-step method, practice exercises, and sample stories to help you awaken to the storyteller within.
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Parenting
Education,
Kids & Family,
How To,
Stories for Kids
RSS
All content for How to Tell Stories to Children is the property of How to Tell Stories to Children and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
From the authors of How to Tell Stories to Children comes a podcast that supports parents, teachers, and grandparents who want to engage in the intimacy and excitement of storytelling at home. Our work has been endorsed by Dr. Jane Goodall, New York Times bestselling authors and parenting guides Steve Biddulph, Kim John Payne, Bill McKibben, Richard Rohr, Charles Eisenstein, and many more. Warning! This is not a collection of children's stories. It's about empowerment. It is about finding your voice. We combine the science of storytelling with a step-by-step method, practice exercises, and sample stories to help you awaken to the storyteller within.
Show more...
Parenting
Education,
Kids & Family,
How To,
Stories for Kids
Episodes (20/29)
How to Tell Stories to Children
A Shared Story & Goodbye to Joseph Sarosy
3 years ago
46 minutes 30 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
Randolph Roots & the Christmas Wichtels
3 years ago
29 minutes 49 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
The Storytelling Tree
3 years ago
53 minutes 41 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
Randolph & the Little Witch
3 years ago
44 minutes 7 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
This is Your Brain on Stories
3 years ago
1 hour 8 minutes 29 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
Randolph & the Corn Mother
3 years ago
1 hour 15 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
The Wizard and the Crystal Ball
3 years ago
47 minutes 24 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
Randolph & the Apple Tree
Hi everyone! We are excited to return with Season 2 of our podcast. We are doing things a little differently this season, so here’s what to expect. A story comes first, so that listeners with little children can access them easily. After the story, adults will have a chance to listen to part 2 – where Silke & Joe give a little background and perspective on the story. Our goal is to inspire you. We love telling stories, but we love it even more when you feel empowered to tell your own. You may find inspiration in the stories. You may find something of value in the discussion. Whatever strikes you, let that be your guide to opening your own voice, like a beautiful flower blossoming after a long drink in the summer sun. In this episode, Randolph Roots encounters a circle of fairies singing around an old and dying apple tree. In acknowledging the loss, there is also a celebration of new life - a tiny seedling sprouting nearby. As we move into Autumn, we invite you to explore stories like this with your children. Maybe take a tour of your garden, yard, or neighborhood, then tell a story about a tree or plant that made an impression on you. Tying stories like this into real life experiences can be incredibly meaningful for both parent and child. P.S - We will still occasional publish episodes on timely storytelling topics and ideas.
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3 years ago
31 minutes 16 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
A Storytelling Game for Families
4 years ago
38 minutes 57 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
Stories to Soothe and Heal Trauma
4 years ago
41 minutes 24 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
Nurturing Your Imagination & Creativity
4 years ago
47 minutes 49 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
Fathers, Stories, and Healthy Kids
4 years ago
34 minutes 37 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
Intuitive Storytelling
The method we teach is called intuitive storytelling. That means you make up the story on the spot. At first this may sound difficult, but everyone can do it and it’s not much different from having a conversation. Prepared stories, like prepared speeches, are generally harder because they induce stress. Tapping into this intuitive method is easy once we recognize: 1. The goal of storytelling is connection with your child, not a bestseller. 2. It’s easier when you’re at ease (not distracted). 3. You have to value your stories, even when they are simple. Valuing your stories turns out to have major consequences. Not only does it lead to more engaged and creative stories, it models to your children that their voice matters. This could be likened to a child’s simple drawing. If we look at it and compare it to Da Vinci, we have missed the point. Sharing our stories means loving ourselves, believing in ourselves, and acknowledging our voice. This is a crucial message to model to children. They will love you for it.
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4 years ago
51 minutes 20 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
Beauty, Simplicity, and the Grass Doll
From grass, we weave the doll. From the doll, we weave the story. What we’re doing is rooting our story in the physical earth. We touch it. We play with it. We create imaginative worlds. This is the power of story, and it creates a very rich experience. In this episode, we explore the theme of self-worth and beauty through the lens of a common blade of grass, who begins to compare herself to the tulip. We will also teach you how to make a simple grass doll. A human figure - whether of sticks, plastic, or yarn - is an essential ingredient of play. As a parent, making one for your child out of everyday objects from the earth can be very rewarding. And it only takes five minutes. The story takes your character even further. You and your child witness the grass becoming a person, and the person becoming a story. Soon we’re building homes out of stones, gardens out of leaves, and super-highways for our imaginations. We call this the Storytelling Loop. It is a journey we take with our kids. We start with something real (like grass), then tell a creative story about it. When we finish, the grass takes on new meaning. Nothing has changed, but everything has changed. Play is often a final component, as a child will commonly repeat or act out the story with a favorite doll - in this case the one you just made! In This Episode - Explore the theme of self-worth and beauty - Learn how to make a grass doll - Watch the video to see an example - Listen to the story of Simplicity, or tell your own - Explore how storytelling changes your child’s relationship to the grass under her feet. Can you see other characters and stories ready to come alive in your backyard? You can find a 10-minute how-to video on making grass dolls at: https://howtotellstoriestochildren.com/podcast-blog/beauty-simplicity-and-the-grass-doll
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4 years ago
21 minutes 17 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
Motherhood Stories on Mothers Day
True stories of motherhood are a gift both to those who speak and to those who listen. Your story is unique. It is worth sharing. In this episode, we draw attention to the need for mothers of all kinds to share your stories and speak your truth. What is motherhood to you? What has it been like to bring life into this world? For men, this is an opportunity to listen. Listening with patience and without an agenda is one of the greatest gifts we can give to another human being. Telling stories is not merely about telling stories. It requires a listener, and within the two a relationship is formed. What does it mean to truly listen this Mothers Day? What does it mean to truly speak? Your story resonates out like ripples on a pond, touching the hearts of girls, boys, men and women - many of whom will be mothers some day, will tend for mothers, and live to tell their own stories. There are 2 billion mothers on the earth. We invite you to truly listen to the ones in your life. For many of you, this may be yourself. And thank you to all the wonderful mothers out there! Happy Mothers Day!
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4 years ago
24 minutes 52 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
A Story in a Loaf of Bread
Baking bread with children can be one of the most rewarding experiences, second only to the joy of eating it. We take it one step further by drawing a story into the experience. Stories help us tie our imaginations into the web of reality at our fingertips, in this case the dough. By listening to a story and helping in the kitchen, we bake a rich experience out of simple ingredients, a process we call the Storytelling Loop. The Storytelling Loop is a journey we take with our kids. We start with something real (like dough), then “plant” a story in it. When we finish, our kids are left with something very real that sparks both memories and their imagination. Play is often a further component, as children commonly repeat or act out the story with a favorite doll or stuffy. Tasting the fresh baked bread makes this experience one of the sweetest. In This Episode: - Learn how to bake bread as a storytelling experience - Visit our website for ingredients and a video tutorial - As the dough rises, listen to the recorded story of “Baker Lou & The Mouse King,” or tell your own - Explore how storytelling can change your relationship to real things. Can you see each ingredient - water, honey, grain, and salt - as a character in your story?
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4 years ago
35 minutes 55 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
Stories for Earth Day
We’re celebrating mother earth this year by telling stories that draw attention to her beauty. There are countless ways to do this, and in this episode we give several examples as well as some guidance on how to pick and craft the right one for your child. On our website, we’ve also included a short video with a quick example of how we do it, something we call the Storytelling Loop. The Storytelling Loop is a great way to awaken interest by “planting” a story in a common object or activity. For example, if we tell a story about a stone, a real stone, a child tends to be curious about that very stone after the story. Likewise, if we tell a story about Batman or fairies, there is often a newfound interest in these characters. The interest our story has sparked often leads a child to continue exploring the subject on their own. So this Earth Day we’re crafting stories to draw our attention to the earth under our feet. This can be as simple as a story about the feeling of grass on our toes, the sound of music in the trees, a curious animal, or maybe just an elf who likes the potted plant on your windowsill. Bring all of your senses into your story - what does it feel like? What does it smell like? What do you see, taste, and hear? If we allow our own creativity to awaken our senses, children love to follow along! The rich sensory language can help them get in touch with so much beauty at their fingertips.
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4 years ago
23 minutes 52 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
Stories Help Children Make Transitions More Easily
We've all been there. We're picking up our child from school or a play date, when suddenly everything goes haywire. Or we've just thrown the world's best birthday party, and right as everyone is leaving the birthday girl has a major meltdown. Transition times can be stressful for child and parent, yet we encounter them almost every day. In this episode, we share a few story strategies that can help parents and children stay connected during these delicate moments. Bringing a story into transitions can give children something to look forward to, rather than merely experiencing the end of what was. Unlike other treats, which are often a substitute, stories give children what they really want - your love and attention. With just a little practice you can easily establish a routine at pick-up time, clean-up, or morning preparations, turning previously stressful transitions into a time you and your child look forward to. Such a skill can be priceless for parents.
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4 years ago
36 minutes 58 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
How to Grow Fresh Green Leaves, Stories, and Kids
There’s nothing like fresh green leaves after a long winter. Resting our eyes on lush grass can be healing, and we can make the plant world sparkle with unique presence for our kids by telling stories that draw their imagination into the growing sprouts. When we tell a story about something real we tie imagination and reality together, a process we call the Storytelling Loop. Play often becomes a third component, because our stories open up a child’s curiosity to explore and create. By “planting” a story in something real (in this case grass), our kids awaken to a very rich experience, with plenty of room to explore both reality and imagination. In This Episode - Learn how to sprout and grow your own wheat grass - Listen to a sample story that will connect your little ones to the grass you're growing at home - Explore the background of how story, real life, and creative activities make for a rich sensory experience - You have the opportunity to play the story we’ve recorded, or use it as an example to tell your own You will find more details, including a video planting guide at - https://howtotellstoriestochildren.com/podcast-blog/how-to-grow-fresh-green-stories In The Story Mira lives in the city. She loves her mom and dad, but she misses her Grandmother’s farm. Then she remembers the little seed pouch Grandmother gave her. She gathers a pot, some soil, and puts all her love and attention into the little seed babies in her care. In doing so, Mira brings the whole family together, and the story describes the same process you and your child will follow to plant your own seed babies at home. In a second story, Randolph Roots, the gnome of the mountain, visits Mira’s Grandmother, and we get to see the seed babies from a whole new perspective. After The Story Plant your seed babies. On our website we have a video with instructions for growing wheat grass, but you could grow beans, squash, or any plants you like. The goal isn’t so much to replicate our process, but to observe the relationship between story and the real (plant) world. We share examples to help inspire you to create your own.
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4 years ago
40 minutes 17 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
Storytelling for Skeptics and Scoundrels
No matter who you are or where you’re at in life, your stories matter to your children. Telling stories to kids isn’t about being groovy and liberated. It’s about connecting. It’s about being real. Storytelling is something humans have been doing for thousands of years, because it works. It will work today if you're perfect, but it will also work if you're not. It will even work in spite of any self-doubt, bad attitudes, or feelings of exhaustion. Because it’s not about being good. It’s about connecting. It’s easy to think that storytelling is for perfect parents, the fairy godmother types, the ones who have it all together. But that would mean there are perfect parents out there, and we know that’s not true. We’re imperfect, each of us, in lots of ways. And we also have incredible gifts. Storytelling is a way to share those gifts, and it allows for a huge range of diverse expression. You can be funny. You can be serious. You can make mistakes. No matter how you do it, it will bring you and your children closer.
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4 years ago
21 minutes 37 seconds

How to Tell Stories to Children
From the authors of How to Tell Stories to Children comes a podcast that supports parents, teachers, and grandparents who want to engage in the intimacy and excitement of storytelling at home. Our work has been endorsed by Dr. Jane Goodall, New York Times bestselling authors and parenting guides Steve Biddulph, Kim John Payne, Bill McKibben, Richard Rohr, Charles Eisenstein, and many more. Warning! This is not a collection of children's stories. It's about empowerment. It is about finding your voice. We combine the science of storytelling with a step-by-step method, practice exercises, and sample stories to help you awaken to the storyteller within.