February 2023 Newsletter

t’s here! 

You are invited to the 17th Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the Storytelling Association (Singapore).

The AGM will be followed by Social Tea and a Storytelling session.

Date:              Saturday 25th February 2023

Time:              3:00 – 3:30 PM – Annual General Meeting

3:30 – 4:30 PM – Social Tea

4:30 – 5:30 PM – Storytelling session

Venue:           Goodman Arts Centre 

 90 Goodman Road, Blk E #0332, SG 439053

All members are welcome to enjoy the Social Tea and to tell a story. We request those who wish to tell a story to keep it to 8 minutes maximum. We will have the time to accommodate 5 tellers on first-come-first-serve basis.

Please note that Professional Members (PMs) and Voting Associate Members (VAMs) are eligible to vote during the AGM.  Associate Members may attend the AGM as observers.

The very first face-to-face SAS workshop in 2023!!

Children today deal with a chaotic, fast paced and sometimes frightening world. Technology has changed the way we interact with each other, but children crave human connection from us as adults.

Julie Neale, is a teacher, a storyteller and a Child and Adolescent Psychotherapist. She explores therapeutic stories and how they may be used in different ways with children either as a group or individually.

Originally from the UK, Julie works as a teacher trainer, mentor and advisor as well as delivering storytelling workshops to pupils and teachers.

Julie studied “The Heart and Craft of the Storyteller” at The International School of Storytelling in the UK.  She teaches storytelling skills to teachers and child counsellors in training.  She carried the Storytelling for Children course “In a Land Far Away”, a six-week course at the International School of Storytelling.

Date: 4th March 2023

Time: 9:00 am to 12:00 pm SGT

Venue: YMCA Singapore (Function room 3, Level 2)

Fee: Member:$14 SG Non-member: $20 SG

Introduction to Storytelling I and II. 

(Organised by the Singapore Book Council Academy.)

Interested in storytelling but don’t know where to start? These workshops by professional storyteller Sheila Wee are for you.

In two 7-hour modules of hands-on training (over 2 consecutive Saturdays), you will gain a firm grounding in storytelling skills. You will leave with one ready to tell story and the tools and confidence to learn and tell more stories.

In a warm and supportive group environment you will learn why storytelling is such a powerful form of communication; how stories can be structured to hook listener’s attention, and discover your own personal storytelling style. Through group, partner and individual exercises, you will be guided through a step-by-step method of learning to tell a story without memorising the words. You will also discover how to add details to make the story uniquely yours, and learn effective story rehearsal and performance techniques.

About Sheila Wee:

Sheila Wee is a professional?storyteller, and?storytelling?teacher with 24 years’ experience. Because of her work to pioneer the movement to revive the use of?storytelling, she has been described as a Godmother of Singapore?storytelling.

She co-founded Singapore’s first professional?storytelling?company and is a founding professional member and the past president of the?Storytelling?Association (Singapore). As well as running her?storytelling?business?Storywise, Sheila is a founding director of the?Federation of Asian?Storytellers.

Special offer for SAS members! 

20% off Introduction to Storytelling I

OR 

10% off on the heavily discounted bundle Storytelling I and II

 

Dear SAS members, if you wish to access the discount, please write to sheilamwee@gmail.com . We will send you the discount code that you can then enter on the registration link.

To register and find out more about the facilitator and the program, please click the registration link

Events in Singapore & Around the World

Every month, a storyteller tells stories to children and family audience inspired by different artworks in the National Gallery. This month, Juriah Attan will tell us stories inspired by Wu Peng Seng’s Net Mending.  

 When: 11 & 12 February 2023

 Time: 2.30 pm – 3.15 pm or 3.30 pm – 4.15 pm (SGT)

 Where: The Keppel Centre for Art Education – National   Gallery

Registration is at the Keppel Centre for Art Education on a first-come-first-serve basis on the day itself.

The sessions are free for families with children.

Free online oral storytelling

Love is experienced and expressed in a myriad of ways. Jointhe Australian storytellers for thought-provoking tales that tell of the many nuances of love.

Whether it’s a romantic love story, a heartwarming tale of friendship, a reflection on self-love, or a tale of a beloved pet, these stories from folklore, myth, legend, or personal experience, remind us of the power of love to connect, inspire, challenge and transform us.

If you would like to tell a prepared story of 5-6 minutes email, Christine Carlton, at  storyaus@gmail.com to be put on the list to tell a story. Your story could be a personal story, myth, legend, folktale, or contemporary fictional story. The focus is to be about the power of Love.

This is a free online event organised by the Australian Storytelling Guild (NSW)  Come as a listener or teller. All welcome.

Register on Eventbrite to receive the zoom link

Date: Wednesday 15th February 2023

Time: 4:20 pm  to 6:00 pm (SGT) / 7:20 pm  9:00 pm Sydney, Australia AEDT

Where: Online on Zoom

This is a free online event organised by Australian Storytellers.

Click here to find out more about the event and to register.

We all have our habits and tendencies when it comes to our voice. Some habits help us tremendously and some hold us back from our full vocal potential.

In this workshop, we’ll begin with a robust voice warm up that you can adapt to your own pre-performance preparation. We’ll then explore the different areas of resonance in your body – where you can ‘place’ your voice to help you create different characters, as well as find a comfortable middle ground for your own narrative voice.

The second part of the workshop will focus on sustained vocal energy, volume and speed, allowing participants opportunities for vocal exploration and self-reflection.(Come with a story you are familiar with.)

About Julie Wee

Julie trained as an actor at The Victorian College of the Arts (VCA) Drama School in Melbourne. Focusing on theatre and voice acting, Julie has taken a particular interest in authentic vocal expression.
She works as a host and as a professional voiceover artist who runs her own home studio. Companies that use her voice include Visa, Olay, Uniqlo and McDonalds.

To find out more about Julie Wee and to register, click here.

Since SAS is an institutional member of FEAST (Federation of Asian Story Tellers), 5 members of SAS can attend this workshop at FEAST member’s rate of SGD$6 (standard rate is SGD$13). Sign up quickly to be the first 5 SAS members to enjoy this rate! Email feastwebinars@gmail.com to get this special rate.

Date: Wednesday 1st February 2023

Time: 7:30pm to 9:00 pm (Singapore time)

Where: Online on Zoom

To register and find out more about Julie Wee, click here.

FEAST has numerous events (some free and some for a small fee) every month. To find out more go to their website here.

Nature’s Beautiful Ornaments

Jurong Bird Park in Singapore closed in its existing location on 3rd January.

The park opened on 3rd January 1971, and after 52 years at Jurong Hill it is now moving to a new location. My association with the park dates to 1985 when I first visited the park. I am sad to see it move, but I am happy it will sprout again in a new place. It has been conceptualized, soon it will be hatched and fledge in due course.

The colours, the determinedness, the purposefulness, the playfulness, the differences, and yet the harmonious coexistence of different birds therein was endearing.

Do they bicker and complain to the rest? Thank God, I do not understand the language of the feathered creatures!

I saw a crowned pigeon that had found a perfect branch for its nest to raise the next generation. It navigated human traffic to carry the branch safely up to its nest. It was lovely to see the focus of that pigeon. (see pictures below)

The parakeets and lorikeets unabashedly engaged in public displays of affection. Could we not do with a little more of that? (see pictures below)

Over the years, I cannot recall the innumerable times I have visited the place. It was lovely to be there on the day it closed.

The birds will be flocked together, I am certain of that. What happens to the gorgeous trees at Jurong Hill?

As I stood there saying goodbye to the place, my thoughts wandered, and I pondered, would Jurong Hill and the gorgeous trees there miss the vibrancy of the place? Will they become a little lonely? If they could share their stories, would they feel like the mountain in the story, “The Mountain That Loved A Bird?”

ThMountain That Loved A Bird 

by Alice McLerran

There once stood a mountain made of a huge rock. It stood alone, in the middle of the desert plains. Nothing grew on its hard slopes, no plants, or trees, and hence no animal, bird or insect lived there. The sun warmed it, and the wind cooled it. The only touch that the mountain knew was the touch of pelting rain and scorching sun. All day long and all night long the mountain looked at the sky and entertained itself watching the shapeshifting clouds. 

It knew the direction of the sun and the phases of the moon. The mountain entertained itself with the various formations of the stars. There was nothing more to see. 

Then one day, a small bird appeared. She flew in a circle above the mountain, then landed on it, to rest and preen her feathers. The mountain felt the dry grasp of her tiny claws on the ledge. It felt the softness of her feathered body as she sheltered herself against its side. The mountain was amazed, for nothing like this had ever come to it from the sky before. “Who are you?” the mountain asked. “What is your name?” 

“I am a bird.” she said. “My name is Joy. I come from distant lands where everything is green. Every spring I fly high into the air looking for the best place to build my nest and raise my children. As soon as I have rested, I must continue my search.” The mountain had never seen anything like a bird before! It asked the bird to stay back. But Joy shook her head and she said, “Birds are living things, we need food and water. There is nothing here for me to eat, no streams to drink water.”  The mountain told the bird to please come back again even if she could not stay. Joy thought for a while. “I fly long distances” she said, “and I have rested on many mountains. No other mountain has ever cared whether I came or went. I should like to return to you, but I could only do so in the spring before I build my nest. And because you are so far from food and water, I can only stay a few hours.” The mountain had never seen anything like a bird before and it was happy and said, even if it is just for a few hours, I would be delighted to see you again.  Joy warned the mountain and let it know that birds do not live very many years, and they fly into danger often. Mountains last for an exceptionally long time. Even if she were to visit the mountain every spring of her life, there might only be a few visits.

“It will be very sad when the visits stop.” said the mountain, “but it would be even sadder if you flew away and never returned.”  Joy sat very still nestled against the side of the mountain.

Then she sang a song, “I am Joy! Hoi! Oh boy! Joy! Joy! Joy!” The mountain had never heard a song. When Joy finished her song, she said, “Because no mountain has ever before cared whether I came and went, I will make you a promise. Every spring of my life, I will return to greet you and fly above you and to sing to you. And since my life will not last forever, I will give to one of my daughters, my own name, Joy and tell her how to find you. And she will name a daughter Joy too and tell her how to find you. Each daughter Joy will have a daughter Joy, so that no matter how many years pass you will always have a friend to greet you and sing to you. The mountain was both happy and sad. “I still wish you could stay,” it said, “but I am glad that you will return.”

“Now I must go.” said Joy, “It is a long way to the lands with food and water for me. Goodbye until next year.” She soared off. The mountain watched her until she disappeared into the distance. Year after year, when every spring came, a small bird flew to the mountain singing, “I am Joy! Hoi! Oh boy! Joy! Joy! Joy! and I have come to greet you.” And for a few hours the bird would fly above the mountain or nestle against its side, singing. At the end of each visit the mountain always asked, “Isn’t there some way you could stay?” And Joy always answered, “No, but I will return next year.”  Each year the mountain looked forward more and more to Joy’s visit and each year it grew harder and harder to watch her go.

Ninety-nine springs came and went in this way. On the hundredth spring when it was time for Joy to leave, the mountain asked once more, “Isn’t there some way you could stay?” And Joy answered as she always did. “No but I will return next year.” The mountain watched as she disappeared into the sky and suddenly its heart broke. The hard stone cracked and from the deepest part of mountain, tears gushed forth and rolled down the mountainside in a stream. The next spring a small bird appeared singing. “I am Joy! Hoi! Oh boy! Joy! Joy! Joy! and I have come to greet you.” That time the mountain did not reply. It only wept thinking of how soon she would have to leave and of all the long months before she would come again. Joy rested on her ledge looked at the stream of tears. When she flew above the mountain, saying as she always did that it was time for her to go, the mountain still wept. “I will return next year” said Joy softly and she flew away. When the next spring came, Joy returned, carrying in her beak, a small seed. The mountain still wept a stream of tears. Joy carefully tucked the seed into a crack on the hard stone, close to the stream so that it would stay moist. Then she flew above the mountain and sang to it. “I am Joy! Hoi! Oh boy! Joy! Joy! Joy! and I have come to greet you.” Seeing that the mountain was still unable to speak, she flew away once more. Days turned to weeks and then to months, the seed in the crack of the rock began to send down tiny roots. The roots reached into the hard stone little by little, spreading into the smaller cracks, breaking through the hardness. As the roots found water in the cracks, and drew food from the softening stone, a shoot rose from the seed into the sunlight and unfolded tiny green leaves. 

The mountain however was still deep in sorrow, blind with tears. It did not notice the plants so small. 

The next spring, Joy brought another fruit seed and the spring after that another. She placed each one in a protected place near the stream of tears and sang to the mountain. The mountain still wept. Years passed in this way. The roots of new plants softening the stone near the stream of tears. The softened stone turned to soil; moss began to grow in sheltered corners. Grass, shrubs, and wildflowers sprouted in hollows near the stream. Soon tiny insects that were carried to the mountain by the wind scurried past. 

Meanwhile the roots of the very first seedling went deeper and deeper into the heart of the mountain. Then a tiny shoot grew into the trunk of a young tree, its branches held green leaves out to the sun. At last, the mountain felt the roots reaching down like gentle fingers, filling and healing the cracks in its heart. 

Sorrow faded away and the mountain noticed the changes that were taking place. Seeing and feeling so many wonderful new things, the mountains tears changed to tears of joy. Each year Joy returned bringing a different fruit seed and each year more streams ran laughing down the mountainside and the land around became green. 

Now that the mountain no longer wept with sorrow, it began to ask once more. “Isn’t there some way you could stay?” But Joy still answered, “No, but I will return next year.”  More years passed and the streams carried life far out into the plains surrounding the mountain, until finally as far as the mountain could see everything was green. From lands beyond the horizon, small animals began to come to the mountain. Watching these living things find food and shelter on its slopes, the mountain suddenly felt a surge of hope. Opening its deepest heart to the roots of the trees it offered them all its strength. The trees stretched their branches yet higher towards the sky and hope ran like a song from the heart of the mountain to every branch, stem, leaf, bud, flower, and fruit.

When the next spring came, Joy flew to the mountain carrying not a seed but a slender twig. Straight to the tallest tree on the mountain she flew, to the apple tree that had grown from the very first seed. She placed the twig on the branch in which she would build her nest. “I am Joy! Hoi! Oh boy! Joy! Joy! Joy! I have come to stay.”   

Hope heals!

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