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Definition
Great. Here’s a simple, repeatable way to start a living memoir, plus prompts to spark chapters.
- A simple entry template (use this for each story)
- Title
- Date or period (e.g., “Summer 1998”)
- Place
- People involved
- The story (10–30 sentences; write it like a scene)
- What it felt like then vs. how I see it now
- Why it matters (what changed, what I learned)
- Artifact (photo, audio, document, object)
- Tags (e.g., beginnings, school, work, love, grief)
- Visibility (private, share with…, public)
2. Core themes with prompts Beginnings
- Earliest memory you trust and why you trust it.
- The layout of your first home—one corner in vivid detail.
- A rule in your house growing up and the moment it bent or broke.
- The first friend you chose (not assigned) and how you met.
Turning points
- A decision that quietly changed everything.
- A time you left one life and entered another (arrival/departure).
- An unexpected “no” that became a better “yes.”
- The day you realized you weren’t the same person anymore.
Work and purpose
- Your first job and the moment you felt competent—or not.
- A mentor’s sentence you still hear.
- A failure that taught you your way of working.
- The project you’re proudest of and what it cost.
Relationships
- Someone who shaped you, for better or worse.
- A love story turning point (meeting, conflict, repair, goodbye).
- A friendship that ended and what you would say now.
- Your chosen family: when you knew they were yours.
Place and movement
- A map of “home” drawn from memory.
- A city or landscape that changed your pace of life.
- A trip that went wrong but became a favorite story.
- Saying goodbye to a place (what you carried, what you left).
Body and health
- An injury/illness that altered your routines or identity.
- A food memory that unlocks a season of life.
- Movement you loved (or hated) and why.
- A caregiving moment that surprised you.
Values and beliefs
- A value you paid a price to keep.
- A tradition or ritual you modified to fit your life.
- A moral dilemma: what you chose and what it taught you.
- A community you left—or found—and the cost.
Joy and play
- The hobby that steadied you; how it began.
- The song/book/film that marks an era of your life.
- A perfect ordinary day.
- Laughter you still remember—who was there, what was said.
Legacy and letters
- A letter to your future self (5 years out).
- An object you’d pass on and the story inside it.
- What you hope is remembered—and what can be forgiven.
- A regret you’re ready to reconcile.
3. Quick-capture micro-prompts (for 5–10 minute notes)
- A smell that takes me back to…
- The last time I felt out of place was…
- I knew I’d grown up when…
- A photo I can’t delete because…
- Something I wish I’d said to…
4. Rhythm and workflow
- Pick a cadence: one vignette per week (30–45 minutes).
- Keep a running “story seeds” list on your phone.
- Write fast; revise later; attach one artifact; tag and set visibility.
- Use voice notes if that’s easier; transcribe and shape into the template.
5. Privacy and care
- Ask consent before naming others; anonymize if needed.
- Mark sensitive entries “sealed” to revisit later.
- Date revisions so you can see how your view changes.