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Mystery The Pick Up Artist
Uses Storytelling On VH1The
next story telling technique is very powerful and ties back
into displaying your personality and bringing your
characters to life.
This technique is adding TOUCH to your stories.
This really helps paint the picture and get your audience more
involved.
An example of this would be like "My friend and I were walking
over there like this... (lock arm in arm)."
Only hold whatever touch you are displaying for the appropriate
part of the story. If you are using something like the arm and
arm example, you would only do it for that short instance, not
tell the rest of the story arm and arm.
An example I would use in my story is when describing his
weirdness would be "I would be talking with some of my friends
and he would come up from behind me, stick his arm around me
like this (put arm on girls shoulder and pull her in, give her
a little shake, showing exactly what he did to me).
The key to not making this look obvious is to continue telling
your story while initiating the touch, and not looking at where
you are touching or pausing and waiting for any form of
reaction.
Another fun thing to sprinkle into your stories is subtle hints
that raise your desirability.
These include mentioning other women in your life, having
special social privileges, being the leader of your group, and
doing things that make you stand out.
These are all essentially tasteful ways to brag in your
stories... without actually bragging. Now you don't need these
but in some cases can add a special flare to your stories.
I do this often by mentioning other women in my stories. You
can do this by changing the word "friend" to "girlfriend" or
name dropping by saying "my friends Lisa and Sarah" anything
along those lines.
They need to be subtle and never the subject of your story.
They are just minor details.
To make them theme authentic, do not provide an explanation for
them. If part of your story involves you hooking up with
multiple people, don't provide an explanation for it, instead
just keep talking, it's not the focus on the story and by not
providing an explanation, it comes off as a perfectly natural
thing that is no big deal.
Once you have thrown in all these fun storytelling tactics it
time to give it the once over.
Eliminate all unnecessary content and make sure your story is
moving along and does not drag out. That is the biggest problem
people make, they drag their stories out too long about things
that don't affect the overall story. Be sure to eliminate
redundancies.
For now...you should be aiming for about 2 mins stories.
How much you share all depends on how your storytelling skills
develop. A masterful storyteller could captivate the audience
for 20 mins. But for now, focus on getting 2-3 solid mins of
your audiences attention.
Remember to look for clues of people fading out so you know
when to speed things up and get to the punch line.
Always make sure you are keeping eye contact, this will help
hold the audiences attention.
Here is the FINAL revised version of my story. Enjoy:
Me: "Hey guys...how do you deal with people when you just
caaaaannt get them to leave you alone?!"
Group: "blah blah"
Me: "Yeah that's interesting so check this out...the other day
I am at Club Voodoo, you ever been? (Check in point)...Cool,
anyway I walk in with a group of my friend Lisa and some
friends she brought along. There is a decent amount of people
in the club, we are all having a great time and meeting lots of
cool new people.
Well this one guy somehow works his into my "group" and he just
has this annoying vibe. Like he is so out of place, he was
walking around with a Harley Davison Motorcycle hat on and like
this tainted banana colored polo. You know when someone just
clearly does not belong and seems out of place... kind of like
that guy (Put arm on person from audiences shoulder and point
to someone else outside the audience)
So my friends and I keep trying to avoid him but he just won't
back down, he would just follow us everywhere we went, buzzing
around like a mosquito...with a really bad taste in
clothing...like you have no idea how bad it was, I would be
talking to some of Lisa's friends and he would come up, stick
his head between us and wrap us both in his arms and give us a
little shake like this...(Do exactly what he did on them) And
the worst part is he had this nasty...thick breath....oh it was
terrible.
(Random Story Telling Tip: Appeal to the senses, especially the
smell, it is the least addressed and most memorable.) Anyway...
my friends and I try to get away by going to the VIP floor and
we have been drinking the free energy drinks all night and made
a super tall pyramid out of cans. (Illustrate structure with
arms).
Then all of a sudden, the creepy guy weasels his way onto the
floor and sits down at our table... and like a jackass he tries
to add a can to the structure. (Start slowing things down for
the punch line)
Little did he know... that although the Red Bull on the top of
the structure was opened... it was full... so this guy tries to
add his can to the top then BAM!...................the whole
structure falls right into his lap and the filled soda can
pours all over his crotch!
(Create dramatic spill scene around your crotch, getting the
girl to look there, although sneaky, creates lots of subtle
sensual messages)
It looked like he wet his pants!
His face turns beat red and he just runs downstairs and we
assume he left the club cause we didn't see him again... I
don't know what the big deal is...I thought it was
hilarious!
(Share a good laugh with your audience, initiate more touch if
you so please, initiating touch during laughter is very
powerful)
If we look back at the original example of...
"So the other day I am at club voodoo with my friends and I am
going around making some new friends and having a good time.
Well this one guy somehow works his way into my group but then
ends up not leaving us alone all night, and he was a really
annoying person that you just don't want to talk to. He kept
making every interaction in the club awkward and would not
leave until he actually gets a hint and goes home."
You can see the dramatic changes these steps can make to any
story.
Before I conclude this oh so long newsletter....I want to leave
you with a couple advanced story telling tips.
-If you are telling the same story, increase vocabulary in it,
use powerful verbs and adjectives to bring the story to
life/
-Always be painting a picture, appeal to all the senses when
possible.
-Start your stories at the end. If you ever saw the movie Fight
Club you will notice how you are caught up into the story right
from the beginning because you are curious to see how Edward
Norton's character got himself in such a dangerous situation.
You can start your story at the end then build up to really
captivate your audience.
-The more emotion you put into a story the better, the more
emotion you show in a story, the more mistakes you can make
because your emotion and commitment to the story covers all
that up.
-Avoid pauses like "ummmm and ugghhh" everyone has a
bad habit when they stumble in there
stories.
-Do not memorize your stories. You don't want to sound like you
are reading from a script, you want it to seem natural. It is
possible to be too good at telling your stories and then it is
almost like the listener is watching a scripted play. Just
understand the concepts and events of your story, there should
always be some slight differences when you tell your story.
Practice telling it...but don't become a scripted narrator.
-Lastly and most important to sum things up....
Do not tell your stories AT your audience...tell your stories
TO your audience.
Make sure they are always getting involved and as you are
telling your story, keep your eyes open for cues in the
interaction you do not always have time to look for.
Use these cues to find what points of your stories get certain
reactions, and use them to move the story along. You pick up on
different things if you are telling a story you know well, this
is another way storytelling continues to improve your
game.
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