Author: Lynn

How to Write Your First Ancestor StoryHow to Write Your First Ancestor Story



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It can be overwhelming writing that first ancestor story. Who do you start with, how do you start? How do you know what to write? The best way to relieve your anxiety is to have a plan in place before you begin to write. Preparation is key.

I encourage you to do some preliminary homework like mapping out your story,  or creating a scene guide before you start. I would also suggest gathering the details of your ancestor’s life in addition to some social history of the time and place to help build your story

Take some time before you begin to write your first draft and enlist these 4 steps. Together they will help you to pre-plan your first family history story

draft.

I encourage you to do some preliminary homework like mapping out your story,  or creating a scene guide before you start. I would also suggest gathering the details of your ancestor’s life in addition to some social history of the time and place to help build your story.

1.Choose one ancestor, one story

First and foremost, choose a single ancestor to write about. Don’t try to write four hundred years of history or about every ancestor in a single

new writers line in one story.   Break your family history down into small manageable chunks; consider one ancestor, one story at a time. Once you’ve chosen the ancestor writers first you wish to start with complete a character profile and develop a timeline of their life. Character profiles help you understand your ancestor intimately and provide you with essential details that will be necessary for bringing to life your ancestor on the page. Timelines help you to identify important moments and accomplishments in your ancestor’s life. Shape the narrative around a big accomplishment.

2. Take some time to outline your story.

Before you begin to write it’s beneficial to know where your story will start and where it will end along with everything in between. If you take some time upfront to plan your story map and outline the critical events in your ancestor’s life, it will go along way to eliminating writer’s block. With a well thought out story plan you’ll know exactly what you need to write each day.

3. Set a daily writing goal

Many first-time writers find themselves dragging out that first draft for weeks, months even sometimes years. Writing a first draft in a reasonable amount of time is about the numbers. Do the math in advance and decide how many words you plan to write daily, giving yourself a realistic deadline for your first draft. By writing daily and with a word count goal, you’ll keep yourself on track to complete your mission, whether it’s a 20,000-word short story for your legacy family history book or an 80,000-word epic family history novel.  Identify in advance your project and the wordcount. Do the math. Time yourself. Write a small scene about something you saw yesterday. Just write. Set the timer on your phone for 15 minutes. After 15 minutes how many words did you write? Multiply that by 4. That is how many words you can write in an hour. Now to complete a 20,000-word story in 30 days, do the math.  How long do you need to commit to writing each day? Now, the only thing left is clearing the time in your schedule.  

4.Develop a daily writing routine

A daily writing routine is essential to completing a first draft and making writing a part of your life.  This is usually where most new writers fall down. By finding the environment, tools, and time of day that works best for you, you can turn writing into a regular part of your everyday life. Habits will help you to center yourself in the writing process quickly and maintain your focus pushing away distractions. Turn off the TV, cell phones and all social media. Create a writing space in your home. If that’s not possible, find a quiet spot at the local library or head to the nearest coffee shop. If one place doesn’t work then try another. But find a space that allows you focused writing time, then commit to a specific time every day.

Remember first drafts are messy. Don’t look for perfection in your first draft. It just about getting the basic story down.

 

 

3 Things You MUST Know About Your Ancestor Before You Write3 Things You MUST Know About Your Ancestor Before You Write



When we fall in love with an ancestor on the page,  we don’t fall in love with the fact that he is a 56-year-old farmer from Ireland with brown hair, a stalky build and always wears a hat. We don’t fall in love with the physical characteristics that we continuously get so caught up in knowing and inserting into our writing. (By the way, most readers will forget these facts.) What we tend to fall in love with is our ancestor’s motivations, their flaws, their vulnerabilities, their strengths. We don’t fall in love with their physical qualities, but with what’s at the core of them internally, what makes them real.

And yet, when we write about our ancestors to tend to only focus on their physical being. We also question if we don’t have a picture of them how can we possibly bring them to life on the page.

In the novella I am writing about my third great-grandfather I don’t know his physical description. I don’t have a picture of him. I don’t know the colour of his hair. It really is quite insignificant. It doesn’t progress the story forward. It doesn’t contribute to the plot, and it doesn’t allow my reader to see my ancestor more deeply.

Only a few physical details are available to me. But I’m not worried.

I do know his goals, his desires, his motivations. I know his fears, his vulnerabilities. I know his life story.  I know his actions and reactions to events in his life. And from his actions, the people he associates with and his past I can bring him to life for my reader.

So how do you make your ancestor real on the page? There are many questionnaires available to help you to get to know your ancestor better. But you’ve got to use one that doesn’t just address their physical attributes, but that gets to the heart of their internal selves. (Warning shameless plug – We’ve got a great one in workbook #2 Authentic Ancestors with lots of info on bringing your ancestor to life on the page)

To know your ancestor completely, you’ve got to know the emotional truths in their being, the relationships, and the history that influenced them, and the way they chose to act in the world and as a result how they were perceived.

Let’s address these 3 big things so you can get to know your ancestor before writing.

1. WHAT DID YOUR ANCESTOR WANT AND WHY DID THEY WANT IT? 

Figure out your ancestor’s primary goal. What is the one most urgent desire they have more than anything in the world? (Hint: This is probably the entire reason you’re writing this story. And it should be highly tied to your plot.

After identifying the goal, we have to dig deeper and discover the why behind it. For your ancestor to ring true, he can’t just want something arbitrary. It must have a higher meaning. Why do they want this thing so much?

Keep in mind, sometimes, what your character thinks they want and what they actually want are two different things entirely. Perhaps they believe they wish to conquer the world, but really they just want to make their father proud. Maybe they think they want to fall in love with someone, but what they need is to love themselves.

 

  1. WHAT HAPPENED IN YOUR ANCESTOR’S PAST THAT INFLUENCED HOW THEY BEHAVED?

Your ancestor’s actions did not happen in a void.  Things have happened in your ancestor’s past, and those things influenced their actions and choices.

If your ancestor watched her parents work as a peasant farmer never getting ahead, she might have a strong desire to own land or maybe get an education. If your ancestor lost a parent at a young age, he might feel strongly about becoming a doctor and healing the sick.  If your ancestor came from a long line of military men he may feel loyalty to do the same. Or perhaps he had a want to rebel against serving in a war. Their actions and choices show these thoughts. Their past experiences influenced their decisions.

Map out a historical timeline of your ancestor’s life. Record all the significant milestones, births, marriages, deaths, careers, military, etc. Identify the 5 most significant, most life-changing and influencing moments they’ve ever had.

Try to sum up your ancestor’s life with those 5 moments. What would those moments be? Why?

CONSIDER How RELATIONSHIPS Affected Your Ancestors

“Birds of a feather flock together.”

Like-minded people tend to hang together. But, it also works in the opposite direction. People who hang together become like-minded. It’s said that your thoughts and behaviors are a compilation of the 5 people you are most intimate with. Those you surround yourself with day-to-day influence you more than you realize. Sometimes that’s a good thing, sometimes not.

Who are the 5 people who your ancestor hangs out with? Friends? Family members? Coworkers? Spouse? Consider how these relationships shaped your ancestor’s perspective on the world. Their behavior? What does your ancestor’s relationship with their mother, wife, children look like? Who does your ancestor trust the most? Who would your ancestor call if they had a problem and needed advice? What does your ancestor’s relationship with their significant-other look like? Are these relationships positive or negative?

Of course, we’ve all experienced relationships that weren’t positive. We’ve all ran into someone we didn’t get along with for some reason. Your ancestor did too. Consider who that may have been. What happened to cause this bond to turn negative. How did this relationship shape them?

3. HOW DID YOUR ANCESTOR BEHAVE AND ACT IN THE WORLD?

Behavior may be aligned with your ancestor’s beliefs, or it may seem to be wholly misaligned with your ancestor’s beliefs. But this is the perception that your ancestor gives off to the world. This is how other people perceive your ancestor because they don’t have access to their innermost thoughts.

Was your ancestor outgoing? Did they talk a lot because they’re internally nervous? Maybe your ancestor always acted out of spontaneity, or carefully planned every move ahead of time. Perhaps your ancestor planned their words before they said them. Was your ancestor action-heavy and continually going places and doing things. Or was your ancestor shy and locked inside their own head?  Did they speak quickly or slowly? Perhaps they felt the need to be proper and ladylike all the time. Maybe they felt the need to show dominance. Maybe they worried so much about what other people thought, or they didn’t care at all and did their own thing against social norms.

How did your ancestor behave in public? How did they present themselves? How did they act? What is the vibe they gave off to the world? How does the world view them?

Here’s An Exercise For You

Now here’s an exercise to help you flesh out your most authentic ancestor. Imagine you met your ancestor at a party and you asked them the classic question, “Tell me about yourself.”

What would they say? What aspects of their life would they choose to highlight? What successes would they bring up? What interests might they want to talk about? What basic facts do they feel they need to share with you? What positive things do they think they need to convey for this person (who doesn’t know them) to perceive them accurately?

 

 

An Ancestor Profile vs. A Family History NarrativeAn Ancestor Profile vs. A Family History Narrative



I recently received an email from a reader about the structure of stories vs. profiles. She was wondereing how a profile was different from writing a family history narrative.

Whenever someone asks me a question like this, it generally means there are more of you out there with the same issue.

So let’s tackle this question and break down how an ancestor profile and a family history narrative are like apples and oranges. They are similar yet different.

An Ancestor Profile

An Ancestor Profile is a snapshot of a single ancestor. It can be an overview of an ancestor’s life, but more importantly, it should focus on something specific or unique about your ancestor.  It can highlight an ancestor’s achievements or accomplishments or an event or critical aspect of your ancestor’s life. For example, it could focus on an accomplishment like an award, or educational achievement or sporting success. It could focus on a career achievement or military history. You may wish to focus on some aspect of the person’s character, or particular interest. Maybe they were they an artist of some kind, or a did volunteer work. The possibilities are endless. It’s not an autobiography or even a biography but more of a biographical sketch. It’s not meant to convey every researched detail you have of an ancestor’s life but rather to shine a spotlight on a specific theme, or idea about that ancestor. It compliments a few pictures and a pedigree chart very nicely. Ancestor Profiles are quick and easy to read, and that means they are more likely to engage your family.

Key Points of a Profile

  • Run anywhere from 500 to 2000 words with a snapshot profile tapping out at 500-600 words
  • Use description, details, action, structure, and theme to create an enjoyable and stimulating sketch of an ancestor
  • Told from the third person point of view
  • Ideal for when there are gaps in your research, and you can’t tell a complete story about an ancestor but do have fascinating facts or events you wish to convey.
  • A good starting point for the beginner writer
  • Fit wonderfully into legacy books, alongside pictures and documents or as a sidebar to the main story.
  • Ideal for newsletters and blog or Facebook posts.
  • Can be weaved into a larger story

A Family History Narrative 

A narrative’s primary purpose is to tell a story.  Don’t let the word ‘narrative’ confuse you. It means nothing more than story. Therefore a family history narrative is in the most basic terms a family history story.

A narrative tells a story using characters (ancestors). Often the story is told from the point of view of one ancestor.  Just like profiles, narratives also rely on creative writing techniques to make them fascinating and entertaining.  In stories, we lean on description, details, action, dialogue, and theme to create an enjoyable read.

The one fundamental difference between a profile and a narrative is the use of plot.  What does plot mean? The plot is the storyline. The writer puts together a series of events to create a story. The sequence or structure of those events is the plot. Typically, an author develops a plot in such a way to pique the reader’s interest. That said, the storyline is not usually resolved until or near the end of the narrative. Plot is fundamental to writing a story. This is why if you want to learn to write a family history story our plotting class is so important.

A family history narrative can fall into the narrative writing style of a novel, short story, novella, poetry or biography.

Key Points:

  • Tells a story or event about an ancestor.
  • Told from 3rd person POV
  • Includes, description, detail, and dialogue.
  • Has a definite and logical plot with a beginning, middle, and
  • Has situations like actions, motivational events, and conflicts or obstacles with their eventual solutions.
  • Narrative writing answers the question “What happened then?”

When it comes to writing about your ancestors, you don’t need to choose between profiles or narratives. You want to employ both styles. They are equally important in sharing your research and have their place. Some ancestor’s lives may be more suitable for one over the other. And of course, if you’re writing a family history legacy book, there is nothing wrong with using a combination of both profiles and narratives.

What is a Plot and Why Your Story Needs One?What is a Plot and Why Your Story Needs One?



If you’re not a member of our Facebook Family History Writer’s Group, then you’re missing out on our Facebook Live videos.  Every other week, I offer a small writing lesson on writing your family history stories. We have an awesome group of writers from beginners to those who have been writing for a while. It’s a supportive and nurturing place to meet up and ask your questions and seek advice.

This week I thought I would share with you last week’s lesson. What is a Plot and Why Your Story Needs One?

 

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Join Us For Upcoming Online Course Plotting a Family History Story

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Sharing Family History in a Children’s BookSharing Family History in a Children’s Book



It goes without saying all the benefits of reading to your children and grandchildren. The more you read to your children the more you set them up to succeed. They develop language skills, exercise their brains and enhance their concentration through reading. Reading encourages their thirst for knowledge, it teaches them about different topics and promotes imagination and creativity. If that wasn’t enough reading books with children helps them to develop empathy. When a child can put himself into the story, it helps them to build understanding. They identify with the character, and they feel what the child is feeling. Children begin to understand and relate to the emotions expressed in the story.

 

The characters in children’s books are often remembered for a lifetime because they are fundamental moments in a child’s development. Did you know that children who know stories about relatives who came before them show higher levels of emotional well-being, this according to a research report at Emory University.  Family stories provide a sense of identity and help children understand who they are in the world.

 

Now allow their favourite hero to be a great-grandfather or great-great grandmother and your children will grow to appreciate their family story and develop what the professionals call an ‘intergenerational self.” The intergenerational self as interpreted by Emory University is defined as understanding one’s place in a familial history. They determined “the development of an intergenerational self, becomes a significant factor as children approach adolescence.

 

So, it occurred to me that instead of trying to force family history upon our relatives it might be easier to introduce it a little more subtlety when they are young through children’s books.

Having I just finished my first family history children’s book early this year I thought I would share with you some information to help you consider if you have a children’s book lurking in your research.

 

Children’s books are divided into 3 categories:

Pictures Books

0 to 3 years – board books, novelty books

3 to 5 years – picture books, ABC books

5 to 7 years – picture books, reading primers, colour storybooks

 

Middle Grade

8-12 years old

 

Young Adult

12 and up

 

Getting Acquainted with Children’s Books

Before you decide to write a children’s book, I urge you to get acquainted with children’s books, especially if you been away from children’s book for a while.

 

  1. Consult children’s section of the library/bookstore
  2. Notice the books your children/grandchildren or friend’s children are reading and enjoying
  3. Read reviews of children’s books

 

Classic Children’s Themes

 

Next, you want to familiarize yourself with children’s themes. Most children’s book will address one of the topics listed below. Understanding these themes, it will make it easier to help find stories within your research. Now, there certainly are other themes, but these are the major ones and are a great place to start.

 

  • Courage – adventure, overcoming fears, immigration and migration are great examples in a family history.
  • Friendship – sharing and helping each other
  • Loss – loss parent or grandparent – through toy or something they value such as a pet.
  • Growing up – accepting change, learning a lesson from life that allows you to mature.
  • Belonging – stories about belonging to a group, not fitting in, helpful way of promoting tolerance and understanding.
  • Anger – reassurance to children that they are not alone in their feelings.
  • Jealousy – related to the theme of anger, a great example is the arrival of a new baby.
  • Love – affirming love for someone and feeling love in return is the cornerstone of a happy childhood

 

Consider the themes listed about match them with events in your family history research. Think about your own childhood  – list memories from your childhood, including favourite food, sweets, clothes, board games, toys trips, adults, holidays or particular incidents. Consider the journey of a family history artifact.

 

To find further inspiration for writing a children’s book consider reading what others have written.

Examples of Family History Children’s Books

 

Seven Brave Women  by Betsy Hearne, 1997 for age 4-8 years old

This book is about the author’s unique female ancestors, including her grandmother who was a harpist-architectural-historian who passed on many of the stories in the book. The first page says that history books often marks time by the wars that men fought. Then each spread tells about an ancestor in the author’s family who made history by not fighting in wars. We read about a Mennonite woman who immigrated to Philadelphia, a hardworking homemaker, a horse-riding painter, a missionary doctor, a single mother working as a secretary, and a storyteller. The storyteller is the author’s mother. Seven brave women who left their imprints on the past and on her. Beginning with the great-great-great-grandmother who came to America on a wooden sailboat, these women were devout and determined and tireless and beloved.

 

My Mother’s Pearls by Catherine Myler Fruisen, 1995 Preschool-Grade 3

My Mother’s Pearls is geared toward little girls. It taps into their love for jewelry, beautiful dresses, and getting ready with mom. Going back in time through seven generations, the young narrator shares short anecdotes from her grandmothers and great-grandmothers who once wore (or played dress up with) the pearls. Little girl relates the story of her mother’s heirloom pearls, handed down each generation from mother to daughter on her wedding day. Readers glimpse a day in 1968 when the unnamed protagonist’s grandmother wore the pearls; a day in 1938, when her great-grandmother wore them; and so on, all the way back to 1788, when the young girl’s 6th great grandmother first received the necklace as a wedding gift from her husband.

 

Fancy Nancy: My Family History by Jane O’Connor, 2010

Nancy introduces readers to the fancy term “ancestors.” She wishes she had famous ancestors like her classmates. Instead, she learns about her great-grandpa who was plain and hardworking. She exaggerates his life in her school report but has a change of heart when she realizes she has something in common with her great grandpa.

 

Maman’s Special Job, by Lynn Palermo and illustrated by Josiane Vlitos, 2018, age 5-8.

Maman’s Special Job is the true story taken from the family history of genealogist and writer Lynn Palermo. This story tells the account of a rural midwife as told through the eyes of her young son, Bert. Growing up in a French-Canadian family, Bert observes his mother’s job and how it affects his daily life. Ultimately, he learns what her kindness and sacrifice mean to their community.


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5 Ways to Describe Your Ancestor in a Story5 Ways to Describe Your Ancestor in a Story



 

When we write our family history stories one of our primary goals is to bring our reader and our ancestors closer together. Our goal is to help our reader to emotionally connect with our ancestor. There are five ways we can help make this happen in our family history stories.

 

The 5 ways we are going to cover involve both interior and exterior characterization. If you try to merge all five into your story when describing an ancestor, you’ll have a three-dimensional ancestor.

 

What is a three-dimensional ancestor? This is an ancestor that comes to life on the page for your reader. It is an ancestor that appears alive and real and standing in front of us and not lifeless and flat. It is an ancestor that your reader can connect with, through physically being able to see them in their mind’s eye, but all being able to connect with them emotionally. It involves using both interior and exterior characterization to bring our ancestor to the page.

 

Exterior characterization is achieved by showing your ancestor’s behaviour towards other people, their attitude to their surroundings and their physical characteristics.

 

Interior characterization involves using their thoughts about themselves and other people to help us to understand who they are.

We can tell or show the reader about aspects of our ancestors’ personalities and lives. We want both. We do this by showing them interacting with their surroundings, their body language and with dialogue.

 

1. Telling: Tell the reader who your ancestor is and what he or she does.

Example: Henry loved to wear a cowboy hat.

 

 

2. Showing: Allow your ancestor’s actions to show the reader their character.

Example: Henry headed out the door of his 5th Avenue Manhattan apartment. He grabbed his white cowboy hat from the table by the door. Pushing his sandy brown hair from his forehead, he eased the hat on his head and checked his reflection in the mirror.

 

 

3.Thinking: You can show an ancestor by allowing the reader to see the thoughts behind their actions and words. What an ancestor thinks about can help explain a great deal about them.

Example: Pushing his sandy brown hair from his forehead, Henry eased the hat on his head and checked his reflection in the mirror. Although he had been in the city for more than a year, he just couldn’t part with his cowboy hat. Besides, the ladies loved it.

 

 

4.Others: You can show us who your ancestor is by how he or she treats other people and the way others treat him.

Example: Your ancestor may be treated with reverence, fear or even hate. She may be treated with gentleness or insignificance. His or her prejudices and beliefs will also affect the way he or she handles others. Perhaps they show hatred for others different from themselves, religion, appearance, their class in society.

 

 

5.The Outside World: We can use the way our ancestor looks at the world around them to allow us a glimpse into their state of mind.

Example: A content ancestor sees the first winter’s snowfall as beautiful. An unhappy ancestor may be depressed by the freezing cold temperatures and being confined to indoors.  The images and words you choose to create the world around your ancestor can help shape your ancestor’s mood according to his or her viewpoint.

 

 

When you incorporate showing, telling, thinking, how your ancestor treats others and how they act and react to the outside world you have a better chance of bringing your ancestor to the page.  As a result, your reader is more likely able to get to know your ancestor, seeing them in their mind’s eye but also emotionally connecting with them.

 

 

What were they thinking? 

Painting a Picture with Characterization

Authentic Ancestors Workbook – Bringing Your Ancestors to Life through Characterization

Creating a Family History Book: Detours, Delays, and DistastersCreating a Family History Book: Detours, Delays, and Distasters



Many of us start out with the best of intentions when it comes to turning our family tree research into a family history book. But then something happens.  Our book project is completely thrown off course, and we can’t seem to get back on track and bring it across the finish line.

You are not alone when it comes to struggling to complete your family history book. There is any number of detours, delays, and disasters that can keep you from finishing.

Let’s look at a few of the more popular problems that can happen to your project and how to fix them and get you back on track.

Disaster – I can’t afford to print my book

I’ve written my book, but it is too big. I mean really big and I can’t afford to print it. This is a disaster first because the entire goal of writing a family history book is to be able to share it. If you can afford to print it, or your family can’t afford to purchase a copy what is the point. What was all that work for?

 

THE FIX –  Take on manageable size projects

Break your family history into sections, one book per surname or couple. You can even create a book on a single ancestor if you have a lot of research for them. Don’t think that your family history must be one giant book. There are so many more viable options that will not only interest your family but make the book more affordable.  If your book is already written, consider natural breaks in your book. Turn the book into a series and print it in volumes reducing the cost to your family.

 

Delay – Life keeps getting in the way of creating my family history book.

I really want to create my book, but life keeps getting in the way. I just can’t seem to find the time.

 

THE FIX–  Comprise a detailed plan

You need a detailed plan with manageable tasks and deadlines that takes you from start to finish. You also need to carve out time each week to work on your family history book. If you don’t make it a priority in your life no one else will. The only way to do that is to schedule it into your weekly calendar and make that time non-negotiable.  When you have a plan, you have a focus, and it becomes much easier to stay on track.

 

Delay – My research isn’t complete.

I want to get a little bit more research done before I start writing my book.

 

The FIX – Adopt a new mindset

Stop it. The research will never be done. Create a book with what you have. If you keep waiting to find that next piece of research to include in the book, you’ll never get around to making your book. You need to adopt a new mindset. Create a book with what you have – One ancestor, one story at a time.  Learn the process of building a book on something small and manageable. Then later you can take on that bigger book. Also, many on-demand printers allow you to make changes to your book at any time. You can always go back a few years from now and make any changes you want, provide updates and second editions.

 

Detour – I can’t figure out how to organize my book.

My book is chaos, it has no organization, and I don’t know how to fix it.

 

The FIX –  Outline the scope and span for your book

Taking some time upfront to identify the scope and span of your book before you start will go a long way in keeping chaos at a distance. Identify very clear parameters for your book, including the ancestors that will be in it, what years you will cover?  How many pages, how many stories? Without these clearly defined parameters, you’ll quickly get off track, and the whole project can become a runaway train that is hard to bring back under control. Mindmap out your contents.  Divide your book into parts, sections, chapters, and stories. When you compartmentalize the book, it becomes easier to organize. Don’t try to write your family history as one long story from beginning to end. Family histories are comprised of many individuals each with their own story. Don’t try to make them all fit together in one story.

 

Delay – I don’t have the tech skills to make a book.

Many family historians are intimidated by the software available to create beautiful coffee table style descendant’s books.

 

THE FIX– Anything can be learned or hired out. 

Build some time into your schedule to learn. If the tech element of producing a book is not your strength, then create a team. Find family members with these skills who are willing to help you. There are also lots of online courses and videos to help you learn book building software. Most of this software has simple drag and drop features. Explore what is out there. It’s easier than you think.

 

Disaster -My stories are boring

My stories are boring, and I want them to be better before I print my book. What good is a book that won’t be read?

 

THE FIX- Learn to turn your facts into entertaining stories.

By learning to write narrative nonfiction, you can turn the true-life stories of your ancestors into entertaining and engaging stories. Narrative nonfiction uses details, description, plot, tension, and dialogue to bring family history stories to life on the page. Take a class and learn to turn facts into real stories.

 

 

Do you have a delay, detour, or disaster that is preventing you from creating your family history book?

 

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Legacy Journalling: Your Life Story Without Being OverwhelmedLegacy Journalling: Your Life Story Without Being Overwhelmed



As family historians, we are well aware of the importance of knowing our family history.  We’ve learned that our past has a great deal to do with our present and our future. When we learn about our ancestors, we learn more about ourselves.

Unfortunately, it’s not enough just to record our family history facts and those of past generations. It is equally important to document our life stories, our legacy. It’s essential to preserve our experiences, our successes, failures, joys and sadness so that future generations can learn from us. So they will not have to speculate about who you were.

 

What is Legacy Journalling?

Unlike lengthy memoirs that can be overwhelming an often dull because they are nothing more than a chronological outline of a person’s life, legacy journalling is comprised of short stories, vignettes, memories that share your life experiences one bite-sized nugget at a time.

The Benefits of Legacy Journalling

If only I had a legacy journal from my great-grandmother or my great great grandfather, the knowledge I would have about him or her would be immense. I wouldn’t have to read between the lines of the census document or will. I wouldn’t have to speculate. I wouldn’t have to piece to gather small fragments that I have gleamed from various documents.

Journalling your memories is a powerful legacy that you can gift our family and future generations. By putting down your life stories, you reach across generations. You’re able to share your life experiences and your wisdom. You preserve the truth of your life and who you were in your own words. Your future descendants will want to know who you were just as much as you want to understand your 3x great grandfather or grandmother.

Writing your legacy can also benefit you. It’ll help you to increase your own understanding of your life. Families can be complicated, and perhaps there are many versions of the truth out there waiting to be told. Writing your legacy is an opportunity for you to discuss your truth.

Recording your legacy will facilitate a personal growth and move you forward in your own life goals. It will be a moment of reflection as you live out the rest of your life and the experiences still to come. It can assist us in the transition from one life stage to another.

For those of us who are baby boomers and are now slowly entering into retirement, legacy writing is becoming very popular to help us make that transition. It allows us to take stock and recalibrate our lives of where we are and what’s left to be done. Legacy writing is also an opportunity to give back to our community through our local historical and heritage societies.

Local museums and archives want your family history,  they need your life stories so that they can preserve them for future generations.

However, with all that being said we still find ourselves not recording our own stories. Generally, because we over complicate it. We don’t know what to write, we are overwhelmed, and we think our life story is uninteresting. But I assure your descendants 2 or 3 generations from now will want to know about your life just as much as we desire to know about our ancestor’s lives.

That is why I recommend legacy journaling. A simple process of capturing small stories, vignettes. Here are three easy steps to getting started in capturing your memories in a legacy journal.

  1. Choose a place to write – Find a place that you are comfortable capturing your memories, stories and life lessons.  This can be a journal you can write longhand in, it can be a word document on your computer, or set up a journal in Scrivener. Don’t over complicate it choose something that works for you. Keep it simple. The more complicated you make it, the less likely it will happen.
  2. Choose a time – Set yourself a regular habit of writing, whether that is once a week, twice a week, once a day. Maybe jot down a memory of a story every morning with your cup of coffee, or one hour in the evening before you turn the T.V. on. Schedule a regular time writing so that it becomes a habit. Instead of opening Facebook in the morning or in the evening after dinner, take 30 minutes -1 hour and begin a journal and start writing your stories.
  1. Keep it Short – Sometimes where to begin can be overwhelming, and often new legacy writers fall into the trap of thinking they need to start at the beginning. You know “I was born on such and such a day to these parents and work your way forward. Yawn! You don’t have to tell your life story in chronological order. Instead, write small memories, reflections, vignettes, that offer up a lesson you learned, a joy, a sadness, a success or failure. Memories that carry with them words of wisdom for future generations.

Your descendants will want to read your words, learn your thoughts. Don’t over complicate. Start with a legacy journal and begin today.

How to Write a Family History Short Story in 10 StepsHow to Write a Family History Short Story in 10 Steps



Family stories don’t have to be epic novels or mammoth books that tell a tale from birth to death of ancestors and their families. They can be short stories.

 

What is a Short Story?

 

A short story is when a character undergoes some event and experiences something which offers him change. Short stories usually say something a small something but delivered with precision.

Short stories are growing in popularity because they can deliver the same experience of a novel but can be consumed quickly. You can post them on a blog, in a family newsletter or turn them into a video or gather a bunch of them together into a short story collection.

A short story is not a life to death tale of an ancestor squeezed into a short time period. But instead a moment in an ancestor’s life in which he or she experiences a life-changing event.

A short story does not have a 3-act structure as we learn in our online class Plotting a Family History Story. Nor is it just Act 1, 2, or 3. It has its own individual structure.

It focuses on your protagonist ancestor. There is usually one conflict two at the most. There are generally no more than two to four characters. The story may transpire over one or two locations.

In a short story, you have less space to develop your ancestor’s character, less room for lengthy dialogue.

A short story is rarely over 10,000 words or below 500 words, commonly between 1500-5000 words. A short story can be read in a single-sitting but long enough to engage and move the reader. The topic is narrow and focused, the story’s meaning demonstrated through events that effect some change or denial of change in an individual.

We’ve broken down the process of writing a family history short story into 10 steps.

 

10 Steps to a Short Story

 

Step 1: Brainstorm

Brainstorm. Choose an exciting event from your research. It could be a happy moment or sad moment or a life-changing event. It could focus on a relationship between two ancestors or with a friend, acquaintance, stranger or spouse. It could be a trip or vacation, a sporting event or other activity. Mine your research and find an event worthy of a short story.

 

Step 2: Choose the Protagonist Ancestor

Choose the ancestor through whose perspective the story will be told. Every story needs a protagonist ancestor at the centre of the story. This allows the reader to connect with that ancestor and the story.

 

Step 3: Find the Story Goal

Before you start any story short or long you must identify the focus, the goal. All narratives have a focal point, a climax. Identify a purpose that your protagonist ancestor sought to achieve in his life. What is the central moment of the story when your ancestor reaches this goal and change occurs?  This is the climax, the goal of your narrative.

 

Step 4: Complete Ancestor Profile and Setting Details

Outline your ancestor’s profile and the setting details. It’s important to take some time to research and flesh out the details and descriptions of the setting of your story so that you can bring it to life on the page. Equally important is understanding your protagonist ancestor on an in-depth level. Complete an ancestor profile so that you can pull together your ancestor’s physical appearance but also come to comprehend what makes them tick and you are able to bring the most authentic ancestor to the page.

 

Step 5: Write the story as a one-page synopsis.

Go ahead and briefly sketch out a 1-page synopsis of your story as you see it. This will help you in the next step of creating a storyline.

 

Step 6: Outline the story structure using a storyline.

Below you’ll find a storyline for a short story. You want to break down your narrative into critical scenes, including opening scene, obstacles, climax and closing scene.

 

Step 7: Write your short story using scene and summary.

You’re now ready to write your short story. Make sure you find a delicate balance of scenes and summary to tell an intriguing tale that will bring an engaging and entertaining story to the page.

 

Step 8: Write a satisfying ending.

Make sure your story ends with a climax and conclusion that leaves your reader with a clear image and message.

 

Step 9: Rewrite for clarity, concision and structure.

Now it’s time to rewrite, making sure every detail is exact. Share your story with a writing group. Get feedback and allow that feedback to grow your writing skills.

 

Step 10: Share your writing with the world.

Now your story is ready to share with the world. Stories are meant to be read. Be brave and put it out in the world. Then, move on to the next story.

 

Need a short story example? One of the first short stories I ever read is Faulkner’s ‘A Rose for Emily.’  Go ahead and give a read and note how Faulkner has structured his story. While this is a fictional short story, I offer it up as a great example of short story writing structure.