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Stories Were Medicine Before They Were Written

Long before books were printed, long before articles were posted online, stories were how Indigenous people survived.

Stories carried law.
Stories carried history.
Stories carried spiritual instruction.
Stories carried identity.

For Native communities, storytelling was never entertainment alone. It was medicine.

As a Native American author and Indigenous storyteller, I do not see writing as separate from that tradition. I see it as a continuation.

The medium may have changed. The responsibility has not.

What Indigenous Storytelling Truly Is

In many Indigenous cultures, oral tradition has always been central to cultural preservation. The Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian documents how storytelling served as a primary method for passing down knowledge, governance structures, and spiritual teachings across generations. (https://americanindian.si.edu)

Stories were not casual.

They were shared with purpose.
Often seasonally.
Often ceremonially.
Often with great care.

They carried meaning layered beneath metaphor. They taught children how to live without lecturing them directly. They connected individuals to community.

In Ojibwe tradition, storytelling includes migration teachings, clan histories, and moral instruction woven through lived narrative. The Anishinaabe migration west, guided by the miigis shell, was preserved through oral history long before it appeared in academic texts.

That preservation was healing.

Because when you know where your people came from, you understand that you did not appear by accident.

Trauma and the Silence That Followed

When boarding schools removed children from their families and punished them for speaking their language, storytelling was disrupted.

When elders were silenced, stories were interrupted.

The U.S. Department of the Interior’s Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative confirms the widespread effort to suppress Indigenous language and culture through institutional systems. (https://www.doi.gov/priorities/strengthening-indian-country/federal-indian-boarding-school-initiative)

Silence can be inherited just as easily as trauma.

Many Native families grew up not hearing certain stories. Pain was carried quietly. History was softened to protect younger generations.

But when stories disappear, identity can weaken.

And when identity weakens, healing becomes more difficult.

Naming What Happened

Intergenerational trauma in Native American communities has been widely studied by scholars such as Dr. Maria Yellow Horse Brave Heart, who coined the term “historical trauma” to describe cumulative emotional and psychological wounding across generations. (Referenced through Indian Health Service resources: https://www.ihs.gov)

Storytelling interrupts that cycle.

When we say:

“This happened.”
“This hurt.”
“This shaped us.”

We remove shame.

Shame thrives in silence.

Stories restore context.

When Native families understand that certain struggles are rooted in systemic history rather than personal failure, compassion replaces blame.

That is healing.

Storytelling as Cultural Reclamation

Across the United States and Canada, tribal communities are revitalizing language programs, cultural camps, and storytelling initiatives to strengthen identity among younger generations.

The Indian Health Service and other tribal behavioral health programs increasingly recognize culturally grounded healing practices — including storytelling — as central to recovery and resilience.

Why?

Because storytelling does more than inform.

It reconnects.

When a young Native person hears their migration story, their clan story, their grandmother’s lived experience, something shifts. They see themselves in a longer timeline.

They understand they are not alone.

They understand survival did not begin with them.

Writing as Continuation

As an Ojibwe woman and Native American author, I write not to replace oral tradition, but to support it.

Books reach people who may not have grown up hearing elders speak. Articles reach readers searching for understanding. Written words can travel across distance in ways oral tradition sometimes cannot in modern life.

But the heart of the story remains relational.

I do not write from theory.

I write from lived experience.

From watching how silence affects families.
From witnessing how honesty opens conversation.
From seeing how stories allow people to breathe differently.

When readers tell me they felt seen, what they are really saying is this:

“My experience was not isolated.”

That recognition is medicine.

Indigenous Storytelling and Mental Health

Modern psychology increasingly acknowledges narrative therapy as a tool for healing — allowing individuals to reframe their life stories and separate identity from trauma. Research published through the National Institutes of Health discusses the impact of storytelling and narrative practices in trauma recovery. (https://www.nih.gov)

Indigenous communities understood this long before clinical terminology existed.

Stories allow individuals to move from:

“I am broken.”

To:

“I survived something.”

That shift is transformative.

It does not erase pain.
But it changes relationship to it.

Why This Matters Now

We live in a time when misinformation spreads quickly. Native histories are often simplified. Indigenous identities are reduced to stereotypes.

Storytelling challenges that.

When Native American authors and Indigenous storytellers write from lived truth, we correct narratives without hostility. We educate without abandoning dignity.

We remind readers that Native communities are not relics of the past.

We are present.

We are evolving.

We are healing.

And we are still telling our stories.

Healing Is Not Erasing

Some people believe healing means forgetting.

Indigenous healing does not require erasure.

It requires integration.

It requires remembering migration and boarding schools and service and survival — not to reopen wounds, but to understand resilience.

Stories hold both pain and strength in the same space.

They allow us to say:

“This hurt.”
“And we are still here.”

That dual truth is powerful.

Carrying Stories Forward

When I speak at military installations during Native American History Month, or when I share reflections through writing, I am not only recounting events.

I am continuing a tradition.

Storytelling in Indigenous communities was always intergenerational. Elders spoke. Youth listened. Youth grew into elders and spoke in turn.

Writing allows that circle to extend beyond geography.

It allows someone in another state — or another generation — to hear something that resonates.

If storytelling once preserved identity through migration, perhaps today it preserves identity through digital distance.

The medium changes.

The responsibility does not.

A Living Tradition

Indigenous storytelling is not confined to ceremony or memory.

It is alive in books.
It is alive in classrooms.
It is alive in conversation.
It is alive in homes.

As long as Native voices continue to speak and write, healing continues.

As a Native American author, I do not claim to heal anyone single-handedly.

But I believe that when we speak truthfully, when we honor where we came from, and when we allow stories to surface without shame, something shifts.

And sometimes, that shift is enough to begin.