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Story Setup

Choose a Title about Your Psychedelic Journey
Psychedelic Prep & Integration

Psychedelic Prep & Integration

Here's an example for inspiration

Make a visual story about your hopes for your psychedelic experience before your journey Then after your experience, make another one. Below, you'll find some ideas for titles of your story. You can use one of these, or be inspired to make your own.

    My Intentions

    What I Hope For

    What is present in my life vs what do I want in my life

    The Wisdom of My Journey

    My Insights

    What Happened

    What I am Afraid Of

    Images and Feelings

    A New Perspective on an Familiar Dynamic

    Applying the Wisdom

    A New Perspective on Me

    Me Before and After

    The Voice of Me I Need to Hear

    The Grand Array

    The Best Version of Me

    An Unexpected Moment of Realization

    My Freedom

    The Doors That Are Open

    The Ladder of Divinity

    What I Want to Be

    The Story of Me I Heard

    What I Need

    The Secret

    The Moments of My Journey

    Emotional Moments

    The World Through New Eyes

    My Person Before and My Person Now

    A Moment of Struggle

    The Taking Forward

    My Life Moving Forward

    My Intention of My Future

    Me On Acceptance

    A New Story Retold

    Open Questions

    Gratitude

    A Scary Moment

    A Moment of Great Joy

    The Vital Essence

    Accessing a Deeper Relationship

    My Core Lesson

If you are ready to make your BioGraff, you can return to the guide book, or continue reading instructions here on your phone.

STEP 2

Story Setup and Structure

Each person needs some plain paper and a pen

 

Your story deserves a sturdy support. Consider putting a hardcover book

or cutting board behind it, in case you want to move it around,

which you might.

Write the title you chose at the top. Draw a frame around the edge of your paper. 

This is the canvas for your visual story.

IMG_9931.HEIC

Now, think of the parts of this story and list them somewhere under the title. These parts can be thoughts, feelings, events, actions, objects, desires, circumstances... anything you need them to be. You don't need to use a lot of words - just enough so that you know what you mean. Think of it as a placeholder for a big concept.

 

It's natural to want to write the whole story on the page. Challenge yourself to stay with the visual. And don't worry: you can tell more of what each cube means when you tell your BioGraff story later.

 

Assign each one a color. 

It might look something like this:

IMG_9957.HEIC

STEP 3

Your Story Style

Now you are ready to tell your visual story. Look through the BioGraff Storyboard Style cards for examples of how to do that.

 

Every story has a structure - think about how a movie sometimes shows you one scene, then goes back in time to tell how the protagonist got into that mess. Or a story is from one particular person's point of view, and then switches to another point of view. 

A visual story has a structure too. Even a single image. 

BioGraffs started out as an interactive art installation. Over the course of two years, we asked over a thousand people to tell a visual story using cubes to stand for parts of the story. Common strategies emerged. These eight cards represent the strategies we observed people using, and might help you think through how you want to represent your own story.

One of these styles might work for the story you want to tell, or you might have a style of your own in mind. 

Read more about what the Storyboard Styles card mean

10 style cards .png

Build your BioGraff however makes the most sense to you. Once you've decided what the colors mean, you are done with words. Let your instinct guide how you lay out the cubes. Let metaphor take over and express meaning in the cubes' relationships to one another.

As you become more experience building these visual stories, you will begin to see new ways to express your internal stories in a visual way.

Read more about what the Storyboard Styles mean

STEP 4

Sharing Your Story

You'll want your camera once again to take a picture of your BioGraff.

IMG_1785_edited.png

You might want to share your BioGraff story with a significant person, or your therapist. Your creation now becomes a visual aid that anchors your story. Tell the story it represents; say more about what each cube means, and why you laid them out the way you did. 

The visual gives you a way to zero in on details, but easily return to the big picture. It invites curiosity from the person you are sharing 

your story with.

It gives you a way to tell the whole story.

You might want to make another BioGraff, or even another one with the same title and a different Style Card. See what else can be revealed.

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