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The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk

430: Matthew Dicks - Change Your Life Through The Power Of Storytelling

The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk

Ryan Hawk

Careers, Management, Business

4.81.3K Ratings

🗓️ 1 August 2021

⏱️ 72 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Text LEARNERS to 44222 for more...

Full show notes at www.LearningLeader.com

Twitter/IG: @RyanHawk12 https://twitter.com/RyanHawk12

Matthew Dicks is a Bestselling author, a professional storyteller, and a teacher. He is a 52-time Moth StorySLAM winner & a 7-time GrandSLAM champion. He’s recognized as one of the greatest storytellers in the world.

Notes:

  • Every great story is about a five-second moment of our life. The purpose of every great story is to bring a singular moment of transformation and realization to the greatest clarity possible.
    • "Let me tell you about my vacation to Europe" is not the beginning of a story, despite what many seem to believe. This is merely an attempt to review the itinerary of your previous vacation
    • But if someone said, "While I was in Europe, I met a taxi driver who changed the way I think about my parents forever," that is potentially a great story.
  • “People are not attracted to people who do easy things. They are attracted to people who do hard things. It’s hard to be vulnerable. That takes courage. And that’s why we are drawn to it.”
    • Being vulnerable opens people up.
  • The beginning and end of a story:
    • Beginning - Promise that what I'm going to say is worth your time
    • End - The fulfillment of that process
  • How to put a great story together?
    • Start at the end... The five-second moment. "What are you aiming at?" You have to know that to craft the beginning.
      • Use a thesis statement -- "I used to be... and I realized..."
  • Jurassic Park is not a movie about dinosaurs. It's about love.
  • How to open a story:
    • Try to start your story with forward movement whenever possible. DON'T start by setting expectations (“This is hilarious, “you need to hear this,” “you’re not going to believe this.”)
  • Requirements of a personal story:
    • Change - your story must reflect change over time. It can’t simply be a series of remarkable events. Stories that fail to reflect change over time are known as anecdotes.
    • Your story only - not that of others
    • The dinner table test - Be human
  • Homework for life — 5 minutes at the end of each day. “If I had to tell a story from today — a 5-minute story onstage about something that took place over the course of this day. What would it be?
    • Homework for life slows time down...
  • Humor -- It keeps your audience’s attention. “The goal is not to tell a funny story. The goal is to tell a story that moves an audience emotionally.”
  • “A written story is like a lake. Readers can step in and out of the water at their leisure, and the water always remains the same. An oral story is like a river. It is a constantly flowing torrent of words.” -- “To keep your listener from stepping out of your river of words to make meaning, simplification is essential. Starting as close to the end as possible helps to make this happen.”
  • During a talk at a school in Brazil, Matt was asked why he shares so much of himself? (Writing novels, stories, teaching, blog posts, podcasts). And he thought for a while and then said, “I think I’m trying to get the attention of a mother who never paid me any attention and is now dead and a father who left me as a boy and never came home.”
  • Your first job as a speaker (at home, on stage, or at work) is to be entertaining...
  • Advice: When you graduate college, it's the end of your assessed learning. What do you want to study next? It will be on you to track. It won't be assessed by others... What do you want to learn next?

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Don't have to have these extraordinary moments. I hope you don't. I don't hope that people

0:06.3

are homeless or had guns to their heads or went through windshields. I don't want that

0:10.5

for anyone. What I want is for them to find the little moments, the ones that are far

0:13.9

more relatable, far more connective to other people and tell those stories instead.

0:22.4

Welcome to The Learning Leaders Show, presented by Insight Global. I am your host, Ryan Hawke.

0:31.4

Thank you so much for being here. Text learners to 44222 to become part of mindful Monday.

0:40.4

You, along with tens of thousands of other learning leaders from all over the world, will

0:45.2

receive a carefully curated email from me. Each Monday morning to help you start your week off right.

0:54.2

You'll also receive details about how my book, Welcome to Management, will help you become a

1:00.2

more effective leader. Text learners to 44222. Now on to the nice featured leader. This

1:08.9

room is a treat, the great Matthew Dicks, best-selling author, professional storyteller and

1:14.9

a fifth grade teacher. He is a 52-time, moth story slam winner and seven-time grand slam champion.

1:25.9

He's recognized as one of the greatest storytellers in the world. A few of the topics we discuss,

1:33.9

the definition of an excellent story, including the component parts and how you can

1:40.9

put this into action immediately. And then how to better open and close a meaning at work using

1:50.9

stories and why is vital you do so. And then Matt shares one action step you can take to make you

1:59.9

a better storyteller and help you live a much more filling life. Ladies and gentlemen,

2:06.9

I can't wait for you to hear this one. It's Matthew Dicks.

2:12.9

All right, Matt, to start, I want to talk about five second moments. And you have said that

2:22.9

Jurassic Park is not a movie about dinosaurs. What is Jurassic Park actually about?

2:31.9

That's one of my favorite things to talk about. What movies are actually about. So if you've seen

2:37.9

the first Jurassic Park, it's actually a movie about a man who can't be with the woman he loves

...

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