Writing About Money on Easter Sunday? Yes! And here’s why…

(Reading time: 2 – 3 minutes)

Our relationship with money is critical, right after relationships with ourselves and others.

Regardless of your belief, money has been a topic of conversation for millennia. The Bible mentions money ~800 times.

What, then, is the problem?

It’s emotional confusion conflating “money” with overweening “love of money.” Money is morally neutral; only our relationship with money matters.

Now, think for a moment, why are you reading this article?

With a self-hosted WordPress blog, you come here primarily for WordPress knowledge, and tips for building community, social networking, blogging productivity and the like… all with your eye on the end game: “gonna make me some money.” There’s no other reason to suffer self-hosting your blog. Much easier to use WordPress.com, Blogspot, any of a squizilllion other free blogging platforms.

Then why is making money so hard?

It’s not hard. We make it hard on ourselves.

Would you like to make it easy on yourself? Let me tell you a little story.

I subscribe to a certain artist’s newsletter, and receive a spiffy little cartoon and dram of wisdom on a daily basis. (I’m not going to link bait, if you’re not familiar with this work and like it, send me an email I’ll send you details.)

Friday morning I opened my email, the image below blew me out of my chair.

I had to have this right nowotherwise I would talk myself out of it!

Consider: I never buy prints; I only buy originals. But I bought one of these immediately.

Why?

Because Hugh made me into a customer.

Now YOU go make you some customers.

Listen here for my thoughts recorded right after I purchased. It’s raw, you can hear me absent-mindedly scraping a skillet.

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.


Note: this article is part of a “300 Word Challenge” where 3 of us (Carlos, Paul and I) each wrote an article no more than 300 words in length. You can read Carlos’ post here: Conscious Me” and Paul’s here: Diary 4 Life

Your Next Killer Technique for Telling Compelling Stories (It’s easier than you think)

(Reading time: 6 – 10 minutes)

What do the bloggers Naomi Dunford, Johnny B. Truant, Kelly Diels and Hugh MacLeod all have in common?

Think about that for a bit.

While you’re thinking…

Imagine raising your family off the grid. Miles past the end of the road. No electricity, save what you can generate for yourself.

No neighbors.

Heh.

The mind boggles.

You can do anything you want, whenever you want. Ride your horse over the mountain. Play Led Zeppelin until you’re deaf in both ears. Shoot guns! Any caliber! Anytime! Frolic naked in the glorious rays of the sun! (Ok maybe not, but still.)

But when the weather goes bad… or the snowmobile breaks… what then?

Sounds like a story in the making.

I’d better back up a little bit. A few weeks ago I was emailing back and forth with Marshall, who (by the way) lives off the grid. We were discussing his website, in particular how much potential he has for hitting it really big. His story has got to be fascinating. I’m sure of it. The key is in the storytelling.

So I promised Marshall I’d start writing about storytelling:

I don’t know how to help you directly with story telling, but there’s bound to be a lot of information online. In fact, I’ll look up story telling myself right after I send this [email] off to you.

Thus, a blog post is born.

Storytelling seems like hard work

Some people seem to be natural born storytellers. I am not one of these people. I have to work at it. Hard.

Working hard means I have to practice telling lots of stories, even when the stories turn out crappy.

Like the following.

A few weeks ago I posted a request for an accountability partner to give me motivation to finish 12 short screencasts on Practical WordPress Tips, or…

I pay $100
.

Deacon took me up on it, and sweetened the deal with an incentive: finish 2 days early, dinner is his treat wherever I want to eat.

How hard could it be, right? These screencasts are short, 2 – 5 minutes long.

But the screencasts have to be done in one take.

After procrastinating 10 days, I spent Tuesday – all day – recording the screencasts. All day to produce 12 stupid little videos. Easy peasy.

Yeah, right.

Everything seemed to start just fine. By mid-morning I had five of the 12 complete. By late afternoon, things weren’t looking quite so good. Think of any mistake possible, I made it:

  • Leaving the microphone off. Check.
  • Forgetting to plugin the microphone in. Check.
  • Forgetting to turn the power on the mixer. Check.
  • Coughing, check. Scraping chair, check.
  • Forgetting what I wanted to say, check.
  • Getting frustrated: check check check!

Even worse, I recorded in the wrong video format and had to spend a bunch of time finding software to convert the videos from swf to mp4.

And worst of all, the end result, the very best I know how to do… is crappy. Bummer.

But…

crappy is better than nothing.

Since I finished the videos early Deacon bought me dinner at Macaroni Grill. And ripped up my $100 check:

That felt pretty good.

Even better, a few days later I had to record a 2 minute screencast several times to get it right. I slurred my words, forgot what I want to say, had the microphone off, you name it, it was just like that Tuesday from hell. But nothing I hadn’t already dealt with.

This screencast turned out better than the first 12. I whipped it out really fast in spite of the mistakes. Progress in inches is still progress.

You can learn storytelling

As I promised Marshall, I did look up storytelling. Even bought a book: “How to Tell a Story – The secret of writing captivating tales.”

Turns out it’s not that hard. Stories have a standard structure. Learning – and using – story structure will improve your storytelling. As you can see above, I’m teaching myself.


In previous articles, I’ve taught you about titles, and about subtitles and teasers. Next up, let’s steal borrow an absolutely killer technique from screenwriting and playwriting: the inciting incident.

The inciting incident allows your reader to emotionally connect with your motivation for writing, drawing them further into your writing and setting the scene for your story.

In short, the inciting incident messes with their heads and sucks them in.

From Richard Toscan,

Inciting Incidents can be the vaguest hints of concern. Or the most obvious sledgehammer. Either kind works. You just need to have one.

(What’s my inciting incident for this blog post? Does it work well, or could it be better? In your opinion, do I use a vague hint or a sledgehammer? What about for my screencast story, hint or sledgehammer?)

Write better stories now!

If you suck at storytelling and want to improve, you’re probably going to tell a lot of crappy stories too. Might as well get started. As my Great Aunt Vina Williams used to say “Time’s a wastin’.”

Here’s a Website In A Weekend challenge: write a simple story (300-500 words is fine) about something as mundane as screencasting, taking special care with the title, the teaser and your inciting incident. Make it easy: use your next blog post; you’re writing it anyway.

After you publish your story, send me an email or leave a comment (you’re probably in my RSS feed anyway), and I’ll link your story right here anchoring with your title. I’ll support the link with your teaser or inciting incident, whichever seems best.

Here’s our #3 storytellers

  1. Justin Matthews gets the first slot with Cloris Leachman and Christmas Lights in the Nose…, a shaggy dog story nicely tied up at the end. Here’s the inciting incident:

    I had a dream last night. Cloris Leachman was the sexy starlet in an unfolding drama that had someone very generic as the leading man. I was off to the side. Good thing too, I could turn my back on the love scene that was just starting.

  2. Anne On Line gives us “I Always Admired Mr. Franklin, But Now I Truly Respect Him.” Check this out:

    Teddy had his stick.

    Martin had a dream.

    And Ben, well, Ben had gas.

    Why is it I am only now learning about this?

    Good question Anne. I thought everyone knew this. *snicker*

  3. Marshall from Real Off Grid Living (mentioned above) weighs in with another driveway story: Backwards Skiing with 1500 Pounds and Wheels. At the end of 3.8 miles of dirt road, Marshall is inventing a whole new genre, driveway stories. Here’s how he kicks off his latest:

    “Ok. Jackie, kids, I think its time to wait outside the rig, I don’t think it or the snow is too stable!”, I heard myself saying New Year’s afternoon. I keep swearing to myself that this won’t happen again. Another year and another incident on the “washboard” with snow. At least this year it wasn’t dark, but unfortunately I wasn’t alone, so my family got to witness the sometimes frightening madness.

    You gotta check out the picture that goes with this, classic stuff. Takes me back to northern Indiana, ca. 1978. *shudder*

By the way, not that it matters (*cough*), but Website In A Weekend just picked up Page Rank 3. Proceed accordingly.

Once you learn to tell the stories you already have, you will acquire a very large audience. I’m sure of it.


If you forgot, Johnny, Naomi, Kelly and Hugh are excellent story tellers. Each of them transform the mundane into magnificence. If you aren’t reading them, you should. I’m learning loads from reading their writing.