Your storyteller loves you unconditionally.

Your storyteller loves you unconditionally.

The following might be the most important thing we need to know about the storyteller. Perhaps, even, the only thing:

My storyteller loves me unconditionally.

Your storyteller loves you unconditionally.

Each of our storytellers loves each of us unconditionally.

This is the reason I chose to dub this worldview “The Storyteller’s Eye.” There is no other word, that I’m aware of, that inherently has unconditionality in it.

If a storyteller tells a story about a rich person, the storyteller loves that rich person.

If a storyteller tells a story about a poor person, the storyteller loves that poor person.

If a storyteller tells a story about a genius, the storyteller loves that genius.

If a storyteller tells a story about a fool, the storyteller loves that fool.

If there is health, fame, fortune, and success in a story, the storyteller loves that health, fame, fortune, and success.

If there is sickness, obscurity, misfortune, and failure in a story, the storyteller loves that sickness, obscurity, misfortune, and failure.

The above ideas have been mentioned in the previous post (What's the point of being in a story at all?), as well. 

“Unconditional love” means fully accepting that an element is necessary and wanted. The storyteller adores you infinitely. She loves you so much that, all this time, when you weren’t consciously aware of her, she unfolded your world for you, anyway.


The worldview tag is best read in this order. The later posts build on the earlier posts.