My Family

My Family
Smile, God loves you

Monday, March 26, 2012

Wow, What a Weekend

Girls Night Out was on Friday and we had so much fun!!!  Our kids are grown and we have kept our friendship going for over twenty-five years.

Saturday, a great Spring Time Storytelling program at work.  The families had a great time and so did I!

Sunday, "Wild About Literacy" at the zoo was a blast.  Hundreds and Hundreds of kids and their families came to the event.  I told three stories and the best loved was "Pickin' Peas".  I think that they just love to see me dance around..

I rushed from the zoo to the Rose Marine Theater to catch the second half

Electricidad by Luis Alfaro which was directed by my friend, Yvonne Duque.

Loving Life, thank you Lord...




.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

TCU all the Way

TCU will be a big part of our lives starting this summer when my grandson, Devonte Fields, will set foot on their campus.  We are looking forward to the journey.  I have already taken my picture with their mascot, the Horn Frog.

Check it out.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/fortworthpubliclibrary/6942089965/

Saturday, March 17, 2012

Trinity my Old Lady

Yesterday, Trinity helped me with my storytelling program.  Trinity, my granddaughter, played the part of an old lady who loved to pick flowers.  She caught a small leprchaun and demanded his gold.  Of course he tricks her and the other children help with the trick.  The kids laughed along with her.  I told a story where the fox suffered a bad tummy ache.  His groaning had the children laughing out loud.  I love to see the children enjoying themselves.  We had some 13 year olds who seemed to enjoy themselves which was Great.  One adult joined us and he called out at the end,  "It's good to see children learning new stuff.  Glad that they are at the library."

What a wonderful reassurance that he enjoyed the stories.  I have about six branches left to tell the spring stories.  Thank God for an opportunity to tell stories.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Spring Time Stories

I'm having fun telling stories at our branch libraries.  We talk about spring and why we have seasons.  I tell two folktales: Anansi and the Talking Melon and The Coming of Seeds & Gardens an Argentina, Bolivia and Paraguay tale.  I also tell a short St Patrick's day tale.  The children and adults have enjoyed the programs. 

The Big Read February 29, 2012 Tarrant Area Food Bank
My body is returning to normal from the inspiring storytelling festival.  I'm a little tired today.  I have a spring program this afternoon no time for a nap :)  Talk to you later.  Miss Jacqui

Monday, March 12, 2012

Dallas Morning News

A great article on storytellers

At festival, storytellers add a bit of character
They share their love of good tales in tradition-rich state
ERIC AASEN
Publication Date: March 10, 2012  Page: B01  Section: METRO  Zone: STATE  Edition: 
For storytellers, the thrill of telling a tale comes from the hush that cascades over a crowd of fidgety kids. Or the eyes of the audience staring straight at them. Or someone walking up to them, remembering a story they shared years ago.
Elizabeth Ellis knows when she's hooked her audience.

"At the moment when they begin to lean slightly forward in their chairs," she said, "you know that they will go with you pretty much wherever you would like to take them."

Texas is fertile ground for storytellers, a place studded with larger-than-life characters and epic tales.

There are tall tales and folk tales. Texas' fight-for-independence stories and ol' cowboy stories. Nursery rhymes and ghost stories.

Storytellers are sharing their love of story in Denton this weekend at the 27th annual Texas Storytelling Festival. Good luck getting a word in edgewise, said Ellis, the festival director.

But, really, we are all storytellers. Each of us has a story.

"We tell fewer stories of 'Once upon a time,' but we tell stories like 'Did I tell you about the time I …'" Ellis said. "If you're telling about the date you had last night, you're telling a story.

"Anyone who thinks storytelling is dead hasn't been to a bar lately. Storytelling is alive and well."

'You own that story'

Some of us, though, are masters at spinning a good yarn.

Jacqui Rash, a children's librarian for the Fort Worth Library, once told students the story of Sojourner Truth, the abolitionist and women's rights activist from the 1800s.
Rash was so convincing that some of the students in the audience thought she was indeed Sojourner Truth.

"When you tell a story … you own that story," Rash said. "You make that story yours."

When Rash turned 14, she worked with a missionary, knocking on doors, asking if they could tell Bible stories to kids in backyards. Rash memorized her stories. The missionary wanted her to talk to the kids.

"It was just natural," Rash said. "I liked the response of the crowd. … I thought that was the coolest thing, to go around and tell stories."

At the Denton festival, Rash will discuss how to preserve families' oral histories.

"You never know who is going to miss out on a good story because no one took a chance to collect it," she said.

But Rash worries that children are spending more time studying for standardized tests and less time listening to stories by Hans Christian Andersen or the Grimm brothers.

"They're missing out on the culture," Rash said. "They're missing out on the language. And they're missing out on some of the story."

'It becomes real'

In West Africa, storytellers called griots share tales in their villages. DeCee Cornish of Fort Worth wanted to be the griot for urban youth.

When Cornish visits schools and juvenile jails, he tells multicultural tales and stories about positive role models.

He explains what they did to overcome adversity. He wants to tell the kids that they can beat the odds, too.

"You use stories to get them past the nose on their face," Cornish said. "You're looking at that kid and he sees your passion. He sees the honesty. It becomes real to him."

Cornish tells the story about Frederick Douglass, the slave who learned to read and write.

"Here we are trying to give you an education and you're squandering it," Cornish tells the kids. "You've got to be thankful for what you have."

Storytelling has a rich tradition in black American culture, said Cornish, who is black. It allows the old and young to come together.

"The most important African-American storytelling does not take place on stage," Cornish said. "It takes place at Big Mama's house when the kids are there, and she's saying what it was like to ride in the front of the bus. … It makes us realize that we have come a long way."

'We're not alone'

When Ellis joined the Dallas Public Library as a librarian, storytelling was the part of the job she liked best.

"Some days, it was the only part I liked," she said. "I tried to spend more time telling stories and less and less time filing catalog cards."

In 1978, after attending a storytelling festival, she decided to quit her job and tell stories.

Texas has a strong storytelling culture partly because of the state's "larger-than-life" persona, Ellis said. Texans also love telling stories about their families.

"We've created a lot of really original characters in Texas," she said, such as Ann Richards and Willie Nelson. "There's no shortage of characters on the Texas landscape."

Before psychologists, storytelling was the "people's psychology," Ellis said, as elders used folk tales to help younger generations work through problems.

"Storytelling activates the imagination and helps us … remember that we're not alone," she said.

Storytellers like Ellis usually aren't talking off the cuff. Ellis sketches parts of the story on paper to help her visualize the scenes. Then she tests her stories, telling them to people she meets during her travels.

But the most important part of telling a great story: You have to love it.

"I don't want to waste my time crafting a story I wouldn't love," Ellis said. "That's like going dancing with someone you didn't like."

GO & DO Sharing stories

What: Texas Storytelling Festival

When: Runs through Sunday

Where: Denton Civic Center,
321 E. McKinney St., Denton
.

Awesome Storytelling Conference

Denton, TX will never be the same.  Storytellers from all over the world assembled at the Denton Civic Center for out annual Storytelling Festival.  It was amazing!  I enjoyed the many stories, friends, new friends, food and bargains.  The time went by too fast.  I look forward to our next gathering.

Eric wrote an awesome article about our love of stories in the March 10, 2012 Dallas Morning News.

Sunday, March 4, 2012

I'm Back

So where have I been and what has taken me so long to get back to my blog?  Let's see:
1. October was our Society of Children Book Writers and Illustrators Conference.  It was wonderful and I learned a great deal from the speakers.   I sent out several of my manuscripts but responses thus far have been rejected.  I'm hopeful that I can get more out soon.
2.  November 22, 2011, the call came that my mother had died.  It was a shock.  We managed to preform the service in Tahlequah, Oklahoma.  My life was turned upside down.  It had only been 18 months since we buried my dear Sister.  I have never been depressed.  God helped me to keep moving.
3.  My husband and I purchased a home in Arlington,TX.  It was such a good deal.  Now we have a huge back yard for our garden.
4. Our youngest daughter had a baby girl February 19, 2012.  She did good and the baby is growing nicely. 
5.  My left shoulder has been giving me trouble.  After a MRI and a visit to a specialist, I will have surgery to have it repaired.  There are some tears in my rotatory cup.  I said, "I will do anything to release this pain.
6.  Preparing to present a workshop next week at the TEJAS Convention.  I will work with my students on ways to collect Oral History. Read More http://www.tejasstorytelling.com/festival/workshops.html
7.  I've prepared two stories to present for the Fort Worth Libraries for March and April 2012.  I enjoy my job and I'm given special opportunities to tell stories.  I just presented a personal reflection at the "Big Read" for Fort Worth.  It's a program to have the community reading the same book, "The Grapes of Wrath".  The community will donate canned food to the Tarrant Area Food Bank.
8.  A staff writer for the Dallas Morning is writing a feature article about storytellers to help promote our conference. He will include information about two other storytellers and myself.
9.  I will preform in the upcoming Vagina Monologue on April 13 and 14, 212.  Tickets will cost from 15 to 25 dollars.  Raffle cost $5 for a chance to will an I Pod 64g Nook, gas card and a Kindle.
10. Keeping my wits about me. Read More at http://vdayfortworth.com/
11.  I've lost 25 pounds and wearing two dress sizes smaller Yea!
12.  So thankful to the Lord for keeping me here to Serve Him,

It's been a busy four months and I thank the Lord for His many blessings.  Hopefully He will continue to bless me to keep my blog up date.

Give a stranger a smile, it's free :)