Telling Stories

I don’t consider myself a good storyteller. My best writing is expository—it lays out an argument or a thesis and then tries to explain it in terms that are convincing to the reader.  Yet I recognize that what is really compelling is a good story—it grabs the attention and makes its point, if it has any, through the course of the narrative.

This is so powerful that Joe Brewer, for example, has laid out a “narrative strategy” for building the Earth Regeneration Fund.  (Video) Essentially, if enough of us begin to tell similar stories about how the funds are being used, this will generate more interest and more funding than just asking for money to restore the planet.

One such story might be that of our trip to Barichara in February of this year (2025) for a weeklong immersion in the work of regenerating that landscape. It was indeed a memorable and impactful trip, but so far, my attempts to tell the story have left me cold. My impressions and photos were mostly superficial, partly perhaps as a result of my health issues, which had me mainly focused on just withstanding the ordeal. I remember many of the events, especially when viewing the images, but I failed to register in any depth the characters and the events that might have made for a captivating story. Read More “Telling Stories”

My Life According to AI

Here is the prompt:

Imagine you’re a 79-year-old man writing the story of his life, interwoven with the major historical events of his time. He was born in Washington, D.C. in 1944, moved to Mexico in 1953, moved to Nice, France in 1960, went to Australia in 1961, moved to New Zealand in 1963 and went to university, graduating summa cum laude; and travelled to Canada in 1969. He worked for the Federal Government of Canada from 1971 to 1978, spent a year in Paris, and returned to Ottawa to found a passive-solar design and construction company, that became successful after a shaky start and then crashed in the recession of 1989, in the same year that his daughter was born; started a mutual credit exchange; moved to New Jersey in 1991, first to Flemington and then to Basking Ridge; and in 2020 moved to Rochester, NY with his wife of 40 years to live. Describe the key historical events coinciding with this man’s life.

And here’s the AI version Read More “My Life According to AI”

Ilana’s Requests

I would love if you ever wanted to write a general timeline of big places and events in your life.
And then of course some of the juicy stories that you’ve always told me about, moments growing up in Mexico and on the ship to Australia (was that when you went on the big ship?) and big moments you remember. I definitely feel like I get a lot of dates and facts mixed up.
I also love the little stories about grandma and you, things you remember about the way she would be around certain subjects (like money, nature, politics, etc) or maybe just about what you thought about different things as a kid that you are now more interested in or passionate about.

Excavating the Past

There’s a sense in which I’m both drawn to and repelled by the opportunity to dwell on my childhood. On the one hand, it might perhaps help me understand where things went awry, or where I just failed to acquire certain habits and attitudes that might have made me more successful in life.

I think it’s clear, going into my eightieth year, that I consider my life to have been less than successful. If there’s anything I regard as an accomplishment, it’s marrying Victoria, and staying together for forty years — with, as far as I know, only one lapse, which I learned about just as we were about to leave on our 25th anniversary trip to Spain and the Basque country.