The Best Stories Are Told After the Event Ends. Here's How to Write Yours.
After every storytelling circle I've ever run, the same thing happens.
Someone comes up to me afterward — usually quiet during the event, usually the last one to leave — and they tell me a story. Not a polished one.
Just something that spills out because the room made it feel safe enough to let it go.
And every single time, I think: that's the one. That's the story that needed to be in the room tonight.
I've heard stories about immigration and sacrifice that would stop you in your tracks. Stories about fathers who never said the right thing and somehow still managed to say everything.
Stories about small, ordinary moments — a kitchen table, a car ride, a phone call that changed everything — that carry the entire weight of a life inside them.
None of those stories were shared publicly.
Not because they weren't worth sharing. Because the people carrying them didn't believe they knew how to write.
Or didn't believe anyone would find their life interesting enough to read about.
Or had been quietly waiting for the right time, the right words, the right version of themselves that felt ready enough to try.
I understand that waiting. I did it for two decades.
What I know now is this: the stories don't need a better writer. They need a structure that makes the writing feel possible — and a room that makes the writer feel like they belong in it.
The Story Frame gives you the structure. Five parts. Three anecdotes, each built around Desire, Obstacle, and Outcome. An opening that pulls the reader in. A close that leaves them somewhere real.
Once it's in your body, the blank page stops being a wall. It becomes a question you already know how to answer.
And the Sprint gives you the room.
Twelve writers, four days, one hour each — working through the same framework at the same time, reading each other's drafts, recognizing their own lives in someone else's story.
The accountability is quiet. The inspiration is real.
And by Day 3, everyone in that room has a finished story they didn't have four days before.
Including the person who almost didn't sign up because they weren't sure their life was interesting enough.
It always is.
The Story Frame Sprint starts March 9th at 9 am PST. Twelve spots.
Happy telling!
-Carlos
P.S. Optional Day 5 — Memoir Café — is where the twelve of you read your completed stories aloud to each other. Included free. It is the room where people finally hear out loud what they've been carrying quietly for years.
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