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DaddyTeller: How To Be A Hero to Your Kids by Telling One Simple Story at a Time
 
 

DaddyTeller: How To Be A Hero to Your Kids by Telling One Simple Story at a Time [Kindle Edition]

K. Sean Buvala
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Over the years, I've enjoyed sharing all kinds of stories with my kids. But when other parents asked me for advice on how they could get started-- I've been at a loss-- until now. Sean Buvala has created that first step. His method is simple, direct, and fun, and leads to stronger relationships between parents and children. What parent wouldn't want that?"-Tim Ereneta --Storyteller.net

Product Description

"Daddy, tell me every story you know!" -daughter of a DaddyTeller user.

Have you ever wished someone would put together a story-time instruction book for Daddies? Well, someone has.

"DaddyTeller," written by award-winning professional storyteller Sean Buvala, is a collection of eight fables, edited and arranged specifically for Daddies to share with their children. They're easy to learn and fun to tell.

But DaddyTeller carries a double punch. Stories like "The Donkey Who Thought He Was a Lion," "Apples For the Princess," and "The Fisherman and His Wife" are not just bonding tools for parent and child. They also demonstrate the value of honesty, kindness, and integrity, warn of the danger of greed, and encourage a sense of self-worth that is even more valuable to your children when it comes from you.

Each chapter presents one story in three different ways. First, the story is written out in its entirety, just as you would tell it to your child. Next, the same story is broken down into a Brick and Mortar Reminder List to jog your memory as you learn the sequence of events. Finally, the story is written out once again, but this time it is studded with action prompts and suggestions for funny faces and squeaky voices to capture the imagination of your audience.

Not a performer? Don't worry. Sean's aim is to get you telling stories to your children as soon as possible, and this he does with warmth and humor. The coaching instructions sprinkled throughout each story, down to what to do with your hands, will have you up and running even if you've never told a story in your life.

The first two chapters of DaddyTeller are also designed to set you at ease. Chapter One is a quick-start, ten-step get-going guide that outlines exactly what to do first, from choosing the lesson you want to share with your child (like honesty or kindness) to the nuts and bolts of how to do it. Chapter Two digs a little deeper into what you can expect from this special time with your kids pointing out, for example, that a story told with bumps and mistakes is better than not telling at all.

Making mistakes is part of the process, Sean writes. Don't wait to be perfect before telling stories to your kids.

Nevertheless, DaddyTeller has been thoughtfully compiled to include all the help you need to make story time a success. There are eight stories in the Ebook itself, plus a link to a ninth story. In addition, Sean offers support for the novice storyteller in the form of audio training and video instructions that can be found at daddyteller.com. You can also sharpen your technique by watching video clips of Sean himself telling stories.

Storytelling as a way to communicate right living has surely been around as long as humans have walked the planet. Campfire lessons on the difference between good and bad choices have gone a long way toward preservation of our species.

And, really, not much has changed over the millenia. The fact is that today children all too often look to movies and television for those lessons, with varying results. Yet a beloved story told over and over by Dad, delivering the message Dad wants delivered, can pierce the jumble of voices in a child s mind and shine like a jewel.

DaddyTeller is a good idea realized just in time. The book promises to show Dads how to teach kids what's really important, and in this Sean Buvala seems to be on the right track. One of the greatest DaddyTeller lessons your kids may take with them down the road is that nothing in the world can ever be more important than spending time with their own kids.

Product Details

  • File Size: 169 KB
  • Print Length: 90 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 055713160X
  • Publisher: Creation Company (May 27, 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B00534JFT0
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #269,848 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Format:Perfect Paperback
With the limited amount of time that Dads spend with their kids each day, finding time to bond is very important. Storytelling is a great way to bond with your child and this book will help you easily learn to become a storyteller that your children will cherish.

Daddyteller showcases eight stories that Dads can share with their kids. Each story also comes with a guide that you can use to learn different expressions and movements that you can do during pivotal parts of the story. This helps you to become an engaged storyteller instead of just someone who is reading a story out of a book.

By using the step by step method and learning the stories in this book, you can tell your children memorable stories that will teach them the important lessons of life.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
A gem! June 28, 2010
Format:Perfect Paperback
The author has hit a home run with this highly accessible book. Great for skilled storytellers, yet also very usable for someone who is "just a dad" (OR a mom, or uncle or auntie or grandparent). He doesn't overwhelm you with a million stories- eight is a good number. But he gives you what you need to be able to actually learn the story: he tells it to you, gives you his "Brick-And-Mortar Story Reminder" outline with the high points, then he gives you his coaching notes. It is like having a master "story-helper" at your side as you are becoming familiar with a tale. He includes great hints for gestures and sound effects (the FUN stuff that real hams are happy to do, and others need a bit of encouragement to know if it is the RIGHT thing or not.)

I also love that the stories he picked are stories that, without hitting kids over the head, teach so many of the values that a good parent wants their kid to learn: the danger of greed, self-worth, and kindness, to name a few.

If you grew up hearing someone tell you stories and always wished you knew how to do that, buy this book....or buy it for someone you love. I ordered a copy for MY dad. He is going to love it. HE was my "DaddyTeller", and now tells stories to the grandkids. Thanks Sean! Write us some more.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Story Telling For Anyman June 23, 2010
Format:Perfect Paperback
Kids love stories and creative Dads have been entertaining their children for centuries with stories. I was pleasantly surprised when I saw what Daddy Teller was about. It is a primer to help dads who may not be used to story telling to interact with their kids and tell them stories. This is a great way to spend quality time with kids and form that special father child bond. Even if you don't feel creative, the story suggestions and examples, will not only have you telling, not reading, stories to your kids, in no time. It will have you sharing valuable lessons as well. With a little help from this primer any dad will be a master story teller in no time.
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More About the Author

Sean Buvala is a Trainer, Corporate Coach, and Speaker. But first and foremost, he's a Storyteller.

If you're anything like me, this word evokes images of rapt little faces gathered round the yarn-spinner, mouths agape, hanging on every word. It should. Storytelling is an art that appeals to the deep emotional memory in all of us. Unlike motivational speaking, which seeks to uplift the listener and spur to him action, storytelling strengthens our powers of creativity and problem solving by drawing on our own imaginations.

In short, storytelling conveys information in a way the listener will never forget.

In 2007 Sean Buvala was presented the Oracle Award by the National Storytelling Network for his work in the promotion of storytelling, including the development of Storyteller.net, an online goldmine of resources for storytellers and their audiences alike.

His work as a trainer and coach in the corporate word demonstrates his ability as a master storyteller. On the premise that good leadership requires strong communication skills, good storytelling techniques and the ability to convey information with impact, Sean designs workshops and seminars specifically for corporate groups, where he trains leaders to lead more effectively by improving their storytelling abilities. Here, he teaches real skills--not theory--that corporate management can implement immediately. In executive-level workshops that identify what already works for the company and what needs fixing, participants are shocked to see dramatic improvement in their public-speaking and leadership abilities.

Now Sean has applied his years of experience as a storyteller--and, not incidentally, father--to a project designed to help Dads convey valuable information to their own children. "DaddyTeller: How to be a Hero to Your Kids and Teach Them What's Really Important By Telling Them One Simple Story at a Time" is a step-by-step guide for teaching Dads to become storytellers for their kids.

As the father of four daughters, Sean knows this subject intimately. Based on the premise that any father can learn to tell his children stories that convey values and ethics to his children, DaddyTeller offers nine simple stories (eight plus a bonus) aimed to turn story time into a meaningful and loving experience for both parent and child.

Beyond the book, Sean provides ample support, not just for Dads but for anyone who wants to learn to tell a story with impact. His video clips and audio files are abundant. Watching him perform is inspiring, and even if all you do is watch, I guarantee you'll tell your next story with just a touch more panache.

Sean describes his own style as somewhere between "in your life and in your face," depending on his audience, and he has ample opportunity to adjust his approach. In addition to his work with teenagers, he is an expert presenter for corporations, teachers' groups, colleges and universities, nonprofits, and faith-based organizations. His expertise includes communication and presentation skills, group dynamics, arts marketing, theatrical training, ministry management, and entrepreneurial development, to name but a few.

As a storyteller, he travels to where the need is, performing in schools and libraries, nonprofit groups, businesses and corporations, festivals, and churches--anywhere people will gather round the yarn-spinner. Using myths and legends, fables, sacred stories, and observations about life, Sean chooses stories that speak to the specific needs of each group

A group with needs was, in fact, exactly where Sean Buvala got his start 23 years ago, in a classroom of wild eighth graders on a very wild day. Desperate, he called out over the din, "Once upon a time...."

A hush settled over the room.

"I grabbed the first kid," he says. "I led him to the front of the classroom and said, 'Once upon a time, there was a man who had two sons....'"

He grabbed the next two boys and placed them next to the first one, where they became the sons. In turn, he brought each child up to be cast as an actor in the story. And the rest is, well, history.


-- by Durga Walker




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