Why People Need Drama in Their Lives

Derek Sivers has an excellent post about attending a lecture by Kurt Vonnegut. The acclaimed author of Catch 22 and other great reads explains why people crave drama in their own personal lives.

Kurt Vonnegut-drama

Time moves from left to right.  Happiness from bottom to top.

It starts with her awful life with evil stepsisters, scrubbing the fireplace. Then she get an invitation to the ball! Things look up. Then the fairy godmother makes her a dress and a coach. Even better! Then she goes to the ball, and dances with the prince! This is great!  But then it’s midnight. She has to go. Oh no. Sadness. Back to her humdrum life scrubbing the fireplace. But it’s not as bad as before, because she’s had this encouraging experience.  Then, the prince finds her, and the happiness factor is off the chart!  Happily ever after.

“People LOVE that story! This story arc has been written a thousand times in a thousand tales. And because of it, people think their lives are supposed to be like this.”

But the problem is, life is really like this…

Kurt Vonnegut-drama

Our lives drifts along with normal things happening. Some ups, some downs, but nothing to go down in history about. Nothing so fantastic or terrible that it’ll be told for a thousand years.

“But because we grew up surrounded by big dramatic story arcs in books and movies, we think are lives are supposed to be filled with huge ups and downs! So people pretend there is drama where there is none.”

That’s why people invent fights. That’s why we’re drawn to sports. That’s why we act like everything that happens to us is such a big deal.

We’re trying to make our life into a fairy tale.

Derek Siver’s post has another great chart about disaster stories. I’m a big fan of info graphics. Done right (like they are here) and coupled with a bit of text, they rapidly and effectively convey a lot of information.

A lot of writers, song writers, and large scale marketers may find his post very useful.

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