Momma said, “Silence is golden.”

Usually after a long day at work, when all she wanted was a little peace and quiet from her children. This theme was carried rather strongly through my school years, as teachers would say, “It’s better to be seen and not heard.” Also one of my favorites, attributed to ‘ole Honest Abe, “Tis better to be silent and be thought a fool, than to speak and remove all doubt.”
I’m shocked at the amount of virtue that my culture has attached to the concept of silence. In hindsight, I’d have to say it’s a lie. That ‘virtuous silence’ now seems to be something of a fiction, some sort of unattainable holy grail that only exists in the minds of librarians and in the halls of some far away monastery high in the mountains of Tibet.

Have I mentioned that I’m a writer? Sure, as of yet unpublished, but the more research I do about how to become a successful author in this noisy ‘look-at-me era’, the more I see loudness, raucous verbal gamboozling, being rewarded. While the quiet, silent types simply fade away, or never get noticed to begin with.
“Blog every day.” they say.
“Content, content, content!” they say.
The ubiquitous ‘They’, the beast that must be fed. I don’t like the ‘They’ and resent having to feed them.

Martin Luther King Jr. said, “Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.”

I firmly believe in speaking up and speaking out about things you are passionate about. What I don’t understand is why and how being a Storyteller in today’s society requires me to inanely prattle on, in the most melodramatic and flamboyant ways I can, to curry favor from the ‘They’. That is wrong. I need to answer a couple of fundamental questions about the modern version of this craft. Maybe someone out there can help me.

How do I let my ‘readers’, my ‘platform’, get to know me without pimping myself and my word smything out?
How do I avoid cheapening my Tales with a bunch of verbiage about me and my opinions that are ultimately not as important as the tales themselves?

1 comment on “It’s not golden.”

  1. Brian

    So, the question you seem to be asking is, “How do you sell ‘yourself’ to your potential readers without selling your ‘soul’ to ‘THEM’ in the process?

    Russ, you are a Storyteller so tell us a story; You are a poet so write us a poem. However, give us just a hint of what is yet to come, of your potential. Continue to use your your blog to provide us with faint whispers of your inner muse, insights into who this Storyteller really is.

    In other words, invite us to dinner but give us only appetizers while await the full meal. The aroma of that grilling steak grows stronger with each passing minute, letting us know it’ll soon be cooked to perfection. Until then all we have are baby carrots and ranch dressing.

    Use this forum to whet our appetites but leave us wanting for more.

    Entice us.

    Tease us.

    Engage us in verbal foreplay, leaving us holding our breath, waiting for that virginal published ‘release’.

    So, “How do you sell yourself without selling your soul?”, you ask? As with most questions, the answer lies within. In this case, in that soul you are so unwilling to part with just yet, until the deal is just too damned good….

    To me, your answer lies literally within the stories you wish to tell.

    Give us an excerpt. Give us paragraph 3 from page 42 or paragraph 4 from page 157. Don’t give us character introductions. Don’t give us resolutions. Give us ‘en media res’ in the style of Dante’s “Inferno”, or Homer’s “Odyssey”. Honestly, we won’t care if they end up in the published works, but with those bits you will, in turn, provide us with that brief insight into your story and, thus, into the Storyteller.

    Leave us wondering what it was we just glimpsed out of the collective corners of our eyes. Force us to irresistibly wonder what else might be lurking in the shadows.of your soul, waiting to be revealed in the coming light of your published works.

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