49 episodios

Inspiring stories, meditations, and interviews of "people of passion and purpose, doing interesting things, living the present moment." Find the blog at LivingthePresentMoment.com

Living the Present Moment Joel Ying, MD

    • Sociedad y cultura

Inspiring stories, meditations, and interviews of "people of passion and purpose, doing interesting things, living the present moment." Find the blog at LivingthePresentMoment.com

    Story: The First Doctor ~ Joel Ying

    Story: The First Doctor ~ Joel Ying

    This story began with an exercise to uncover a memory that would make a good story. As my attention narrowed to a particular moment, I had the feeling that there is a story in here somewhere that I want to tell. This moment with my dad held significance for me. I began to unpack the scenes and emotions of my eight-year-old self from the vaults of memory. Bringing this past moment into the present, I began to reflect on it and ask myself the question: "How did this moment change my life?" I began to unpack related memories, although not all of them made it into the story. Then, I asked myself, "What does this moment mean to my life today?"







    Crafting personal stories requires these steps: (1) find a memorable moment, (2) unpack the moment from memory, (3) reflect on the impact that this moment had on your life which might require unpacking more moments, and (4) reflect on the significance it has in the context of your life today. After all this unpacking, the final step is to add creativity to the telling of the story.







    If you had asked me why I wanted to become a doctor before I wrote this story, my answer would be very different.







    Listen to the podcast, The First Doctor, by Dr. Joel Ying, MD

    Story: Persephone and the Seasons ~ Joel Ying

    Story: Persephone and the Seasons ~ Joel Ying

    Why did Persephone eat that pomegranate seed?







    As seasons shift and the Spring Equinox approaches, science gives us an explanation. The earth rotates on its axis, and the side that faces the sun has daylight and the other side is in the darkness of night. However, the Earth also revolves around the sun with a tilt in the axis, and this gives us the seasons. When the tilt brings more direct sunlight to the Northern hemisphere for more hours of the day, it brings summer to the Northern hemisphere. The sometimes complicated stories of science allow us to understand the seasons and make sense of the world.







    Myths and legends also allow us to understand and make sense of the world. These stories hold knowledge and wisdom in a different way. The Greek myth of Persephone is an origin story that explains why we have seasons. If you remember the Greek story, you do not need science to tell you that the world has seasons. You will remember Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter.







    You might dismiss the Greek myth in favor of the scientific explanation, but you would lose the rest of the wisdom captured in the story.







    Enjoy my original version of this Greek myth. I've reimagined the story of Persephone and Hades... and the origin of the seasons.







    Listen to the Podcast: "Persephone and the Seasons" re-imagined by Dr. Joel Ying, MD

    • 10 min
    Story: Truth and Story ~ Joel Ying

    Story: Truth and Story ~ Joel Ying

    "Stop making up stories!" I overhear an exasperated mom talking to her 4-year-old.







    In this context, the word "story" has become synonymous with lying, making up fiction, not telling the truth.







    However, in the context of the art of storytelling, making up fiction does not mean that a story does not contain a deeper truth, a universal truth, a deeper meaning.







    What is Truth? What is Story?







    Listen to the podcast.

    • 3 min
    Story: Spring of Youth

    Story: Spring of Youth

    Storytellers in my tradition look for stories that hold some sort of "magic." We tell stories that we love--sometimes for reasons that we know and sometimes we just keep telling them until we figure out why.







    This story has held me since I first heard it. Folk stories travel across the world and adapt to the cultures that they meet. The wisdom is distilled and often poured into another container. I first heard this as a Jewish story, and it took me some time to track down the original Korean version. I read and listened to several versions, took it down to the bare bones, dreamed on it, combined the elements that spoke to me, and created my own version.







    Listen to the podcast







    The Spring of Youth ... a Korean folk tale, told by Dr. Joel Ying, MD

    • 6 min
    Story: Love or Money ~ Joel Ying

    Story: Love or Money ~ Joel Ying

    There are some stories that you do not really know until you've heard it directly from the people that have lived it.







    Growing up, I knew my parents story of immigration from bits and pieces of overheard conversation, stories gathered second hand told by other relatives, and gaps filled in from similar stories that I have heard. My parents left Jamaica to escape political violence and a failing economy to find a place with a better future for their children.







    In June 2016, on my way to a storytelling open mic with the theme "Fathers," I stopped at my parents house for lunch. The Moth is a non-profit that promotes "true stories told live," but I could not think of a story to tell that evening. I had a sudden epiphany that I should talk to my father to get a story idea.







    I sat with my a parents in the family room with the TV off (something strange for them), and I began to ask a few questions. The seed for this story began as they opened up and told me the story for the first time in their own words. On one level, I had known the story, but I did not understand the emotional truth of the story until after that conversation.







    I can still see my father thoughtfully searching for the words to answer my questions and my mom sitting on the other side of the living room interjecting her own words with a humorous smile.







    I still did not have a story ready to tell for that June 2016 event. However, the seed for this story had already started to grow. Several months later, the open mic theme was "Money." With the realization that money was a theme in this story, I crafted the initial version. I put my name in the basket for The Moth StorySlam, but I was not one of the lucky ones chosen that night.







    Fortunately, I have made my own luck. As a producer of events, I have found many other venues and audiences to tell this story. As a living entity, this story continues to grow--expanding, changing, flowering, and often getting pruned.







    Listen to the current version.

    • 10 min
    Story: Ninth Night

    Story: Ninth Night

    "Show me the manner in which a Nation or community cares for its dead and I will measure with mathematical exactness the tender mercies of its people, their respect for the laws of the land, and their loyalty to high ideals."

    ~ William Ewart Gladstone















    In this podcast story, I explore the tradition of Ninth Night in Jamaica and celebrate the life of my Uncle Charlie.







    It was a gift to be able to perform this story at a family reunion in 2019. In the audience were Uncle Charlie's grandchildren who had never met their grandfather. The entire family was moved by the experience. It was a moment of healing, and I often return to the story when I need healing.







    It has also been a gift to hear the many stories that others share about their families, cultures, and traditions after hearing this story.







    Perhaps you will share yours.

    • 12 min

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