John Titford's book |
Titford’s instruction is clear and I agree completely. If
you are capable of writing a narrative family history, then do it! Family
history comes in a relatively dead form—names and dates on a paper or even a
parish register—and the much livelier version. This version was alive at the
time the person was alive and by writing the story of that person, we can again
infuse our ancestor with spiritual life. Collecting data is only a start. It is
definitely more rewarding as we analyze and synthesize our data and make it
into a story that helps the person live and breathe once more.
As if that were not enough, this type of research can also
inform our gathering of data. As we trace a life, we realize there are things
we don’t know, in fact, things “we didn’t know we didn’t know” until we started
imagining a life.
Titford gave us answers to our excuses:
I don’t have time.
Take a break from research or whatever else is so important. This is important
too.
My research isn’t
finished. That’s true enough, since our research is never finished. But we
write for this moment, this point in time. Just as in a court trial, new
evidence will emerge.
I can’t do a good
enough job. That’s perfectionism talking—Don’t listen. If I’m not so good
at writing now, I’ll learn as I go.
My software crashed.
Time to get it fixed.
My family’s story is
ordinary. That’s good, we’ll relate to it. The truth is that every story
deserves to be told.
How about telling yours?
Dear Joy,
ReplyDeleteI ran into your blog while doing some research on genealogy sites; my son, Eli, is currently developing a product that we think may be helpful to genealogists, and other people interested in ancestry, called Storied.
The goal of Storied is to make the process of capturing and sharing meaningful cross-generational family stories easy and accessible for people of all ages. It was inspired by hisfather-in-law Don's experience with Alzheimer's disease, and the photo book his daughter Kathy put together for him.
Don was able to sit down with the book and reminisce about people and events that he would have trouble recalling in conversation; the family was able to capture stories from Don's younger years that would otherwise have been lost as his dementia progressed.
Eli wants to create a digital version of this tool for capturing stories, and make it easy for people of all ages to capture and share their family stories. He hopes to be able to eventually integrate this content with sites like Ancestry.com, to make available some of the great stories behind older pictures.
He is currently running a Kickstarter (crowd-funding) campaign to help us finish the product. If you have a few minutes to watch the video on our Kickstarter page which gives a background on Storied, and are interested in what we are trying to accomplish, we'd love for you to share the campaign with your network (and possibly on your blog if it's an appropriate fit).
Thank you very much for your time,
Anina
@Storied - Best to you and your family, Anina.
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