storytelling resolutions

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Making resolutions in the new year has become a tired joke about well-intentioned over-commitment. Last January I opted to consciously remove rather than add new things to my to-do list in hope of narrowing my expectations of what was actually achievable in a lifetime.

It was excruciating to put aside writing projects and break my 400-day Duolingo streak, but it helped me focus on my storytelling workshops, which I’d neglected too long. I am honored to report that focus helped me secure a 4Culture Projects Grant that will allow me to offer a pair of Story Slant workshops in King County this year!

I’ll have more to share about the project in months to come, but you can check out more on the creative, therapeutic process of story slanting over on my website. (I want to send a giant thank you to Lee Hooyboer for helping me get the site together after I lost my last page in a messy clicking accident.)

Laare Vane

I went looking for origins of the New Year’s resolution in Ronald Hutton’s tome, The Stations of the Sun. Though I found no mention of that tradition, I did learn about shifting folk practices during the Twelve Days of Christmas, from mumming and wassail to misrule and gifting habits.

The nearest thing to New Year goal setting was one variation of the Mari Lwyd, or “Horse’s Head” tradition. The Laare Vane (a horse skull or carved wooden head on a pole) led a parlor game of tag on New Year’s Eve along with music and an elaborate stick dance. The fiddler then submitted to a “mock beheading” and would lay in the Laare Vane’s lap to answer questions about the new year. The narrativist in me appreciates the storytelling setting for telling tales about what the new year might hold. It is a great opportunity to explore our imaginative potential, rather than just setting aspirational parameters for our year.

inspiration this month: re-reading

One reason I turned to Ronald Hutton was to understand more of what I missed the first time through Wolf Hall by Hillary Mantel. Her whole trilogy is a brilliantly engaging exploration of the reign of Henry VIII and the indomitable Thomas Cromwell’s role in changing that world. This time I’m reading the novel for the Bowie Book Club Podcast. We’re recording our episode later this week and revealing the rest of the books on our 2026 schedule. Come read along!

Last month for the podcast I re-read Ursula LeGuin’s sci-fi classic The Left Hand of Darkness. Gender, politics, prejudice and a great escape narrative! It was one of my top five books of the year. The other titles on our top ten are listed on the Bowie Book Club bookshop.

My third big re-read began when I joined a a book group for Proust’s A Remembrance of Things Past. It is an epic and luxurious commitment to make with fellow readers. We will be at it for a while. I am 20 years older than when I first started reading Proust’s giant novel and nostalgia for a mother’s affection or the distracting jealousy of a new romance feel very different this time through. It’s a little like re-tasting a favorite childhood cookie and discovering new flavors now that I’ve learned a bit more about baking.

Thanks and see you next month.