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Storytelling: Simple but profound

April 3, 2011

For this one mother, storytelling was an essential way of communicating. She needed to be able to describe the horror of learning that her son had been in an accident, of going to the hospital to identify the body, and the burden of all the decisions that followed. Most importantly, being able to communicate this in a holistic way – meaning  expressing emotions as well as recounting events – to the young man responsible for the accident was something that she desperately wanted. 

I was reminded of this conversation as I read the reflection of a colleague facilitating his first Sycamore Tree Project®   course in Australia. In describing week three of the eight week course that brings together unrelated victims and offenders, he recounted how three of the participants spontaneously began to share more deeply about their personal stories of victimisation including one person who son had been brutally murdered.  In reflecting on their time together he says:

“Many of these people have been harmed by our court system and have never been allowed to tell their stories, but the Sycamore Tree Project® gently opens up the space for this to happen.  I am so privileged to be able to guide this conversation into unexpected and unseen terrain.”

The space to tell one’s story and to be heard and understood is a powerful place to be. Not only to the one telling the story but also for the ones receiving the story and those creating the space for storytelling.   That is one of the gifts of restorative process — whether indirect processes such as the Sycamore Tree Project® or direct victim offender encounters.  These processes open spaces for authentic communication that allows connections on very human levels. And, as my colleague from Australia, I feel privileged to be able to offer that space. 

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Blog PostCourtsPrisonsRestorative PracticesRJ and the WorkplaceRJ OfficeStatutes and LegislationStoryTeachers and StudentsVictim Support
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