What do you get from a storytelling show besides a great evening and a YouTube video? If it’s PCC’s 2025 storytelling show, the answer just may be a timely primer for navigating into the new year. Consider these thematic highlights as the reminders we all need right now:
The power of our storytelling show is not (just) to brag about our incredible team and partners. It is to remind us all that none of this is possible in isolation. That, in fact, as last year’s storyteller Edwin Rich shared, disconnection can be a kind of disease.
Yet, as simple as all that sounds—be brave, work together, community is everything—none of it is easy. And for all its philosophical simplicity, operationalizing it is incredibly complex. It involves creating enough structure and muscle to keep a movement, well, moving, without creating outsized burdens or new breaking points from overdone rigidity.
As we reflect on the year (almost) behind us and prepare for the year to come, let’s remember how much we need a diversity of roles and gifts and voices. To borrow from politics—and a past storytelling show—we really are stronger together.
Please also keep that in mind this giving season, and don’t give from a place of charity. Supporting community-based organizations is important, but it’s not really a gift.
It’s an investment. In our communities, our values, our collective vision.
More importantly, as County Councilmembers Balcombe and Friedson observed in a November hearing, the helpers and the ones being helped are often the same. Or, as we’ve said before, the storytelling show tends to remind us that we all move between places of need and strength. Vulnerability touches us all, but it doesn’t have to trap us. Donate your dollars (#MontgomeryGivesLocal) as an investment in our collective future. The return is real.
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