🚩 Why THIS Storytelling Pattern is a MAJOR Red Flag!

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18 Replies to “🚩 Why THIS Storytelling Pattern is a MAJOR Red Flag!”

  1. I talk like that because of my autism. So if people are getting red flags do to my disability making me incapable of talking like a normal human being. I don't want to be a part of your species Any longer.

  2. I'm an intense neurodivergent and I have learned to leave out the climax, minimize it, or get to it in chronological order so I don't overwhelm people. Also doing these things slows my anxiety with communication, somewhat. The book I'm writing begins with the climax though, because it plunges the reader into the action or interesting part. I think it's called In medias res.

  3. What alarm should it set off… other than that you’re about to get bored to death?
    I know people who have to tell every story from the start, to the extent that the first 3 chapters of their tale has damn all to do with the plot.

  4. True. I’ll tell of how I escaped my kidnapper but rarely ever tell how it all happened to begin with.

  5. Good point in a lot of cases. I think artistic people and those with vivid visual memory tend to be more descriptive than most, often getting into details & setting the scene so to speak… Especially if building up a funny or shocking experience. This is usually conversational, not interrogation speak, though. Hopefully LE knows the baseline for ADD/HD & TBI types, too!

  6. 🙏🏽for you. The panel is on my YouTube subscription. I heard your conversation about your life.

  7. Jennifer Han (the young woman who had her parents killed but staged it as a break in) literally did this. When the detectives asked her to tell them what happened, she started with telling them what time she woke up that day instead of telling them about the “break in.”

  8. So in a traumatic situation if the peak is not the first mention does that mean that the subject or event was untrue ? Or could the person be trying to downplay so not to be re-living a traumatic moment?

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