This week I’m revealing some of my all-time favorite writing prompts to help you write some of those precious memories and preserve them for generations to come. Download your Prompts Guide
This week I’m revealing some of my all-time favorite writing prompts to help you write some of those precious memories and preserve them for generations to come. Download your Prompts Guide
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.
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.
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.
Your descendants will want to read your words, learn your thoughts. Don’t over complicate. Start with a legacy journal and begin today.