If you haven't already caught up with the adventures of Kate, perhaps its time. Our members are all unique and work with stories in many wondrous ways. For the past few years Kate has been sharing her passion for personal storytelling and her wish to see others (especially women) find their voice and shape their stories through workshops, individual coaching and by providing supportive spaces to tell. Kate facilitates the only all women story gatherings in Melbourne that we know of.
Alongside all this, Kate has created a series of podcasts from stories she collected at the sessions recorded at the Holgates Hotel in Woodend, she created and toured a one woman show
Fantastic Feminist Folk Tales and she presented at TED x Bendigo.
AND ... while doing all this, Kate has held a leadership role for Storytelling Australia Victoria as vice president for over 4 years. In 2018 alone, while wearing her SAV hat Kate curated
Peace of Heart in Macedon, an evening of stories to mark World Peace Day, as well as advising and supporting emerging member storytellers.
Visit
Kate's website and while you're are there, sign up to the newsletter and you can follow events and enjoy her thoughts.
Here she is on personal storytelling.
Sometimes people make glib comments about personal storytelling being
indulgent, self serving and self absorbed. This can be taken on by some
of the people I work with who say, even as they are drawn to personal
storytelling, that they feel too self conscious or feel it is too
self-centred, to share their stories.
This is thinking that must
be examined and debunked if we are actually to tell our stories in ways
that enable us to develop and fully use our voice as a means of self expression, and be helpful for others.
Exploring, understanding and expressing who we are, what we believe and
feel is a core task of living. We are meaning making machines, but
unless we reflect, and consciously share our experiences, in thoughtful
and meaningful ways, we risk being reactive, and unconscious, and
relating to ourselves and therefore each other in superficial ways.
If we are feeling self conscious when we tell, then we are ironically,
doing exactly what we are afraid we would be doing - we are making the
story all about us. It is when we share our story with the sole purpose
of offering it, and the meaning making we have done through our story,
as a gift, that we then step into our voice and express ourselves in the
age old and sacred way of human communication. It is an act of
leadership, and we are hungry to be lead, we are hungry to explore
behind the masks we all wear, to feel, and grapple with what it means to
be human.
This is an act of trust, trust in ourselves that our
voice is worthy, trust in the audience that what we offer will resonate
with at least one person who is listening, and we share as a gift and so
ensure we are trustworthy, telling the right story for that time place
and audience.