Telling the disaster story

Spring in Arkansas brings new leaves on trees, fresh colorful blooms, and potentially nightmarish weather. April 13, I watched as heavy rains caused flooding in Little Rock near my home.

A catastrophic damage causing F3 tornado on April 2nd, 2006 near Wynne, Arkansas. ©  iStockphoto/clintspencer

A catastrophic damage causing F3 tornado on April 2nd, 2006 near Wynne, Arkansas. © iStockphoto/clintspencer

Pictures posted on Facebook included a car in water almost over the top of its hood and a collapsed retaining wall on Kavanaugh, a winding through street. Bad weather struck central Arkansas again Sunday, April 30, 2014, when an EF4 tornado swept across several counties. Homes and businesses were damaged or completely blown away to the foundation. The new $13 million Vilonia Intermediate School was totally destroyed. But the most heart-rending loss was the fifteen lives taken by the tornado.

How does one go on after family members, homes, and businesses are wiped out unexpectedly in a moment? Certainly the disaster workers, friends, and families as well as many other countless hearts that give of their resources to assist are a help. It might also help to tell your storm related story. The Hodgepodge Darling, a blogger named Jessica Sowards who identifies her blog as “one crunchy, Christian girl’s musings on homemade life, motherhood and the daily attempt to walk humbly with her God,” did just that on April 30, 2014. The post goes on to share her friend April’s faith amidst the grief of loss and her own personal physical injuries.

Though the weather predictions were bad, Sowards and her family moved to their new home with its concrete basement in Vilonia the day of the storm. “We’ll be safe, we thought. We were.” Sowards tells of watching the tornado as it moved over the area where her friend April Smith lives. Sowards’ husband went to check on the Smith family, then relayed the horrifying news of the death of the family’s two sons.

As a blogger, you never know when something will ring a bell with the masses and be shared across the blogosphere get picked up or even become viral. The post by The Hodgepodge Darling was published by Faith-it.com, local news stations, and even the Deseret News. As it came to me I was struck by the faith of April Smith, injured in a hospital bed, grieving the loss of her two sons and the family home. I was struck by the love of a friend who was at her side immediately after the tornado hit. I was struck that Soward was so trusted by her friend that Smith told her to publish her hospital bed picture and tell her story letting the whole world glimpse her at her lowest point.

Many of us enjoy folks coming alongside to celebrate our successes, milestones, good times. It takes real transparency to allow others in when we are battered, broken, bruised. The openness to share our deepest depths can be opportunity to show that life isn’t always a walk on the sunny side. Sometimes life’s path is trough dark times we could never imagine or foresee. The courage to tell of those difficult days can encourage others to face their own as well as come alongside. And for those lucky enough to have a friend like Jessica Soward to help you tell your story when you are unable to yourself I say, “Honey, you’ve hit gold.”

 

iStockphoto

Whether you’re blogging your story or publishing your own ebook, you will want photographs to illustrate your work. High quality images can set the mood, raise interest, touch emotions. I use my own images as often as I can on StoryDame. When I don’t have an image or can’t take one that’s suitable to my need, I turn to iStockphoto.com. iStock by Getty Images is “the web’s original source for royalty-free images, media and design elements.”

Screenshot of iStockphoto. ©iStockphoto.com

Screenshot of iStockphoto. ©iStockphoto.com

How do you use iStockphotos? I like to purchase credits. Buyers can get 10 credits for $19.95, or $2.00 per credit. Prices go down the more credits you purchase at a time. If you purchase 60 credits for $99.99 each credit costs $1.67. Since many images cost on two credits (so 60 credits could mean 30 images), if you opted to pay $99.99, the two-credit image costs only $3.34. Used sparingly to supplement your own images, 30 iStock images can go a long, long way. And since the images are high quality, submitted by photographers around the globe, just a sprinkling of these can help make your blog look less like just another a family snapshot album and more like a professional museum display with a kiss of home-grown honey.

Let’s say I’ve written a hysterical story about the night I was awakened by noise and called police only to discover my intruder wasn’t a burglar, murder or science fiction monster, but two possums fighting over control of my basement. Did I snap a photo of those fellers that night? No. I was too scared to think of taking my camera down to open my basement door for the three policemen.

A search for possums gives a result of 350 images. I will want to narrow my search by cost. On the left I click on $ under price range which will eliminate the expensive images and narrows the results to 249. Among the first few are two images of possums with their mouths open, giving the possums a fiercer look. I chose one and select the smallest digital file for two credits.

Am I done? Not quite. I bring the file into the media library of WordPress. Under caption I add a caption and the credit requested by the woman I spoke with at iStockphoto: ©iStockphoto/name of the photographer.

In addition to photographs, iStock also offers illustrations, and audio and video files. Handy if the fact that iStock keeps up with trends. Two of iStock’s trends for 2014 caught the eye of StoryDame. Read about the first in The second StoryDame Methuselism.

The second trend is trend #12 or what iStock calls “Experiences over things.” In three short sentences iStock illustrates how you can have “a skill,” “an experience” and “stories” for life! Click on it and what do you get but 72 images of people in action sure to spark stories from our own experience.

Do you narrate your life by capturing high quality images as well as through words?  Consider becoming an iStock contributor who can make %15 percent royalty (22-45% if iStock is your exclusive online royalty-free agent) for each download. Application is through three easy steps. If you’re successful, maybe I’ll end up purchasing one of your images!

A Gander at Google Analytics for Storytelling

An age-old philosophical question and beginning of a lot of groaner jokes asks, “If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?” We true life storytellers may or may not view ourselves as philosophers as we reach into the depths of our experience and cry out – verbally or in written form – the experiences of our lives. But if no one is there to hear or read our stories, is it really storytelling?

©iStockphoto.com/Marco_Pepperoni

©iStockphoto.com/Marco_Pepperoni