Every person has a unique life story. There is no such thing as two life stories being the same. As a life story writing coach and memoir teacher, I believe everyone should take the time to put their story on paper.
Forgive yourself for past mistakes, embrace the past sorrow, pat yourselves on the back for the good times, and sit down and write about your life.
Why do I say that with such urgency? Because writing your life story is not only a gift to yourself, but also a gift for family and friends, as well as generations of families not yet born.
Let’s examine why you should write your life story:
Firstly, write the story for yourself. By writing the stories from your life you help yourself form a clearer understanding of who you are and how you got to where you are. You learn about yourself, and often bring closure to issues. Treat yourself to the experience.
I wrote the memoir Eating the Walls after the death of my husband and raising two girls alone. Through writing the memoir I was able to understand with great clarity why I had made the choices I did. Writing our life stories is cathartic and enlightening.
Secondly, leave a legacy for family and friends. In today’s fast-paced world, there is never enough time to sit down with family and tell them about your childhood, career or romances. Your written life story can give them a book about who you are and where you came from.
I often wish I had thought to ask my mother more about her life prior to marriage and family. I wish I had the opportunity to learn about that woman. Sadly, I thought about it too late.
Maybe your family does not have the time to read your stories today, but there will come a time in their life when they would want to know who you were and why you made the choices you did.
How did you experience the history of your time? Preserve those stories by writing about them. Black and white television with no remote controller! No cell phones – remember the phone was attached to the wall!
Share your version of who you are!
A few years back, I completed a memoir with a 91-year-old man. We met weekly, with his daughter recording the stories, many of which she had never heard before. Every time we met, laughter and tears filled the room as we weaved together a memoir that children and grandchildren will have forever.
The process was as enjoyable as the end result. At our last meeting, the daughter said to me, “My father has a new love of life. For the first time in his life, he speaks about how proud he is of his achievements, and how he is ready to forgive himself for his mistakes because he now realizes that he tried his best. After witnessing how my father has changed, I believe the most healing thing a person can do is share their story.”
How do you start to write?
10 minutes a day or a page a day is better than nothing. Use the old-fashioned egg timer and just write!
You can write your story in different ways: chronologically, by life themes, or from your senses.
When writing chronologically, I recommend that you first make a life chart. On the chart write your age in five-year intervals – 0, 5, 10, 15, 20, etc.
Next to the number note any major life events or branching points, when you could have gone one way or the other. This will allow you to see your life clearly. Each week you can focus on writing about one life event.
Here are some life themes that the majority of people experience – childhood family, romance, education, career, spirituality, health, gender, adult family, friends. Make lists of events under each theme, and then write the individual stories.
Our senses are wonderful memory closets. A certain scent or taste can often bring back a flood of memories. Play music that evokes memories and then begin to write; look at a picture from the past and write; open an old bottle of perfume and write. Cook a favorite childhood food and then write. Allow your senses to open up the stories of your life.
Are you interested in writing your life story? Many people want to write their life stories but never start. Have you ever tried? What stops you from starting? Please join the conversation.
Tags Creativity
actually I want to write about my grandmothers. the lives they lived was very different from ours. we are told very incorrect narratives of their lives.
My children have urged me to write about family history especially that of my parents and grandparents. I think of these stories at random times and will probably write them in that way. The thought of our family history being lost is sad to me. We can learn about the resilience of our ancestors through written stories. Now I’m on to find a blank book and begin.
I have wrote my main story about growing up with my mothers depression, suicide attempts and ultimately ending her life with the reality of carbon dioxide poisoning. Reliving the different effects on me in growing up and now in my later years. I always felt that just maybe it could help another person know that they are not alone while living with the same issues.
I have started the writings and thought I had completed it several times, but, I seemed to always come up with more each time I begin to rewrite. I am not what you would call an “Writer” or “Author” by any means, I’m not even a good speller, I keep a dictionary beside me. But I do have that urge to reach others about depression and living with it. I just have problems sticking with it and probably the finances that goes along beside it Any feed back would be appreciated.
Thank You