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Creating Audio Memoirs Scituate Families Can Pass Down Through The Generation

By Ruth Young


Oral histories are an important part of any family. Most people have had grandparents and great grandparents who loved to talk about the old days and how they grew up. Unfortunately, all too often families don't think to record the stories senior relatives tell, and the information is lost. You can avoid this if older relatives will agree to participate in creating audio memoirs Scituate families can pass down.

You can start with parents, aunts, uncles, and grandparents who are willing to sit down and reminisce. You can record the information with a digital or tape recorder, phone, or pen and paper. In order to get the ball rolling, you might pull out old letters, mementos, and photographs that have special meaning to the senior and ask what he remembers.

You won't be able to keep all the information on your recorder, so you might as well make plans to transfer the recordings regularly to your computer. Instead of loading up your internal hard drive, you should consider purchasing an external hard drive, if you don't already have one. Keep in mind that, when you are finished, you will want to share the information with family. You'll need to know how to format their copies.

When you sit down to talk to an older person you might not have to do anything to get them started remembering. A lot of seniors are eager to share their memories. Sometimes a person might not know where to start or think they don't have much to contribute. In this case, you should come prepared with questions.

Visual prompts are great ways to stimulate an elderly brain. Old photo albums are usually full of pictures of relatives no one can remember. If you have copies of old marriage licenses, ship's logs, birth certificates, or report cards, you might ask what your relative can remember about them. Military medals and discharge papers are a great way to get veterans to reminisce. You have to remember to be respectful and thoughtful when touching on sensitive memories.

Organizing the information as you go along is important. If you leave stacks of flash drives, discs, and papers in a pile, at some point, it will be impossible to go back and put them in order. There are a number of ways you can set up your files. You could organize information by person or by year.

At some point it could be a good idea to start printing the information out so you have a hard copy. If you are creative, you could make up a family book with stories, photos, legal documents, and keepsakes. You never know how technology will change as the years go on, and in the future, your flash drives and discs might not be compatible with new technology.

Researching family roots has become very popular. There are a lot of websites devoted to ancestry with historic documents pertaining to specific families. They can't compete with the recordings you make of your loved ones recounting the past however.




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