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    Dan Benor's Wholistic Healing Blog Awesome Wholistic Healing Blog Wholistic Healing Research facebook page WHEE facebook page International Journal of Healing and Caring [IJHC] facebook page Sands of Time eZine facebook page Paintap twitter Daniel J. Benor - LinkedIn
    The International Journal for Healing and Caring
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    Storycatcher: Making Sense of Our Lives through the Power and Practice of Story

    by Christina Baldwin
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    Novato, CA: New World Library, 2005.  237 pp.  Notes 8 pp.  $14.95.

    Christina Baldwin, a pioneer in the art of journaling and narrative as methods of self-reflection and observation for personal growth, has written books that have become classics in journal writing, such as One to One: Self-Understanding through Journal Writing and Life’s Companion: Journal Writing as a Spiritual Quest.  Her fervor for her life’s work is evident in Storycatcher, her most current book. 

    It is through story that we define our life.  It is also through story that we are able to make connections, teach ourselves, gain meaning to our lives, leave a legacy, and heal ourselves.  In Storycatcher, Baldwin takes the reader even beyond the role of the self-reflective writer to the role of “storycatcher.”  Storycatchers are those individuals who are aware of the gifts cloaked within the ordinary stories of our everyday lives.  They are those who are inquisitive, empathic, nonjudgmental, and attentive to the narrative, whether it be their own or another’s story.  Through these qualities, a synergy is possible between storyteller and listener, which can build a connectedness that remains long after the story is told.  Whether the story is “caught” orally or on paper, what may have seemed to be an ordinary narration is revealed as a gift through the storycatcher’s ability to ask focused questions and listen actively for the richness beneath the surface.

    Although Baldwin takes the reader into aspects of her personal life journey through glimpses of her past experiences, this book is not merely a memoir in the disguise of a guide.  Being a storycatcher herself, Baldwin weaves stories about herself and other people among factual data to illustrate and reinforce the importance of story.  She expands her discussion into brain function as related to language, the history of personal journal writing, and the ability to transform our personal future, as well as those of our community, through story.

    The book has three primary premises (p. xii):

    • Our perception of our experiences and how they are languaged in our story shapes our lives.
    • What is accentuated and brought forward in our collective story determines our relationship in community.
    • Our belief in the possibilities of our future world is determined by what we carry on through our larger human story.

    These premises are beautifully explored through Baldwin’s gift of storytelling and recognition of insightful experiences in hers and other’s story. 

    Storycatcher is more than a narrative of the power of story; it can also be used as a guide to become a storycatcher.  When “catching” our own self-story, the author offers four activities to employ – linking, editing, disorienting, and revisioning. (p. 123)  Linking is gathering the evidence to back up our story.  The significance of linking is that we have the ability to unlink – whether the evidence is reinforcing a strength or a weakness.  Editing is updating our self-identity and how we relate our story.  As we gain new experiences and insights, editing is a necessity.  Disorientation is that uneasiness we feel when progressing through a period of growth.  When questioning our feelings of disorientation, we move into the alchemic process of revisioning, where we modify our story to reflect our growth and build the foundation for moving forward with purpose.

    Baldwin contends that, as our personal stories are revised and retold, we become capable of stepping out of our small world into the bigger picture view, recognizing our connections to a larger community.  Through this awareness, we start believing that our personal actions make a difference and we can be of service to others. 

    The last half of Storycatchers shares a spectrum of narrativesh: a young African woman who started a learning village to train community leaders; an elderly woman from Arizona healing the heritage of alcoholism in her family; a Danish visionary who works with organizations to recover their purpose; and four clergymen reevaluating their personal beliefs to cultivate a religion of grace. 

    By the end of Storycatcher, the reader is drawn into the call to become a storycatcher.  It is a call to become an activist in changing the world through the power of words.  “Story can save us,” (p. 236) declares Baldwin, and the reader is caught up in the movement to preserve the stories of our times so that future generations will know the history that created their world, whether it be private or global.  Baldwin maintains, “[Story] can lift us beyond the borders of our individual lives to imagine realities of other people, other times and places; to empathize with other beings; to extend our supposing far into the universe; to even imagine God.” (p. 63) Her words express the power available through story in breaking down the illusion of separateness that is prevalent in our society and, thus, bring spiritual healing to the world. 

    Baldwin writes in a style that reflects a loving, gentle spirit who is able to hear a storyteller’s heart language.  She is an inspirational writer who clearly conveys her passion for story.  She provides questions at the end of each chapter to draw out stories from the readers in their quest to become storycatchers. The back of the book includes a guide for establishing a reading group to cultivate meaningful conversation and writing.

    Review by Karla Giminez, Master’s Student
    Holos University Graduate Seminary
    http://www.holosuniversity.org/ 

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    Dan

     
     
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