top of page

The Storyteller’s Corner!
Every Great Story Begins in a Space to Grow.
Search


Memory Palace Storytelling
What This Game Teaches This exercise teaches participants how to use spatial memory techniques to remember and organize stories more effectively. Group Size Individuals or small groups Time 15–30 minutes Energy Level Low How to Play Introduce the concept of a “memory palace,” a familiar place (home, route, building). Ask participants to map key points of their story onto specific locations within that space. As they mentally “walk through” the space, they recall each part of
Apr 11 min read


Story of My Name
What This Game Teaches This exercise helps participants explore identity and personal narrative by telling the story behind their name. Also builds connection through short personal sharing. Group Size Individuals, pairs, or small groups Time 10–20 minutes Energy Level Low How to Play Ask participants to reflect on the story of their name. This could include: How they got their name, Who they were named after, A nickname, How their name has changed over time, or A story ab
Apr 11 min read


Story of My Life (in 1 Minute)
What This Game Teaches This exercise teaches participants how to distill their life or experience into a clear, concise narrative with a beginning, middle, and end. Group Size Individuals, pairs, or small groups Time 10–20 minutes Energy Level Low to Medium How to Play Ask participants to tell the story of their life in one minute. Encourage them to include: A clear beginning (where they started) A turning point or key moment Where they are now Give a few minutes to think or
Apr 12 min read


1–2–3–4–5–4–3–2–1 Word-at-a-Time Story
What This Game Teaches This exercise strengthens collaboration, listening, and narrative structure while adding a layer of challenge and play. Group Size Pairs Time 5–10 minutes Energy Level Medium to High How to Play Two participants tell a story together. Start by alternating one word at a time. Then move to two words each, then three, up to five words each. After reaching five, go back down (four, three, two, one). End the story cleanly on the final words. After finishing,
Apr 11 min read


High-Five Story Swap
What This Game Teaches This game builds collaboration, adaptability, and shared ownership of a story, while helping participants practice letting go of control. Group Size Pairs Time 5–15 minutes Energy Level Medium to High How to Play Two participants begin telling a story together, with one person starting. At any moment, either person can initiate a high-five. When the high-five happens, the other person immediately takes over the story. The story continues with control sh
Apr 11 min read
bottom of page