When many people arrive at their golden years, they feel the urge to share their life story. Have you every felt that way?
But then, thinking about chronicling the past 60, 70, or even 80 years of your life can be a daunting thought.
You might feel that it would be easier to jog to the top of Mount Everest in 4 hours than it would be to write about your life.
Don’t despair! It can be easier than you think.
Much easier. (And a WHOLE lot easier than jogging up Mount Everest! Trust me.)
Roberta Temes’ book How to Write a Memoir in 30 Days is the way to go for writing your memoirs. In fact, in my humble opinion, it is the ONLY way to go! Lemme tell you why.
Wait.
First, I want to get something straight. If you’re like me, you might think that a memoir is a chronological narrative of your life starting from the day you were born up until when you started writing.
You might think you have to tell about things like when you first rolled over, got your first tooth, started crawling, when you learned to walk, when you said your first word, and when you got potty trained.
That’s not so.
A chronology like that is an autobiography. A memoir is an emotional reminiscence of your reaction to a few events that occurred to you. It could just be the story of how you fell in love with music and with playing the organ and how you had the opportunity to play the pipe organ at the Holy Name Cathedral in Chicago. It could be your experience surviving an earthquake. It could be your story of surviving a life threatening illness.
A memoir covers only a few years. It is your emotional reminiscence of a specific time in your life or of an experience that you had.
(Thanks, Roberta, for that clarification! That is tremendously freeing to know that.)
Phew! So writing your memoir is more of a jog around the blog than climbing Mount Everest. It’s easily within your reach. You can do it — especially with the help of Temes’ book.
I like that there is a different writing prompt for each day. Temes gives you questions to ponder, circumstances to choose from, personal issues to consider. With her guidance, you can easily decide what to write about. And, by day 23, you have a rough draft of your memoir. For the last 7 days, you tweak your writing until by the end of the 30th day your memoir is written.
Huzzah! You did it! Pat yourself on the back and go out to a swanky restaurant for some fine dining. You deserve it. (I’d go to the Olive Garden because I love their bread sticks and lemon cake dessert.)
But wait! What if you feel that you’ve written something that is print worthy? That a publisher would be willing to publish?
Not to worry. In the short appendix (it’s only ten pages long), Temes tells you what you need to do to find a publisher or to self publish. She just lists the steps. She doesn’t give any in-depth information. You’ll have to go elsewhere to get that.
If you want to write about your life, this book is the way to go. I predict that you won’t get discouraged in the writing process. You won’t be overwhelmed. You won’t feel like shoving your work in the bottom drawer of your desk and forgetting all about it.
You’ll just be successful.
I give this book two thumbs up.
Disclaimer: I received a free copy of this book for my review. It did not in any way influence my opinion of it.
15 thoughts on “Write Your Memoir”
Simply explaining the importance of writing our beautiful moments.
I have the framework, but don’t know how to begin or get started.
Books like this one are a great help to get you started. There are prompts to get you thinking about something. Then, all you have to do is take a moment to jot down a thought or two about it. Don’t worry about writing EVERYTHING down. Don’t worry about writing your life story from your birth to today. Simply write down what you remember about something: a favorite toy, a holiday tradition, a family pet, a childhood friend. If you just write a paragraph and do that several times over a week or two, you’ll have a great start!
It would be great to get writing again as what I have written over the years are shoved in the bottom drawer.
Isn’t that why we blog? Laughing at my own comment. I hope that if anyone wants to remember who I am they will go back and read the hours of time I put into writing Grammie Time. This post you wrote is great, really. Something to consider very seriously….
Hi Michelle,
I’ve written mine — I just need to update it because it’s several years old.
You know, you could put your posts into a book with a service such as Shutterfly and then your writing would be available in book form! You might want to consider that!
Warmly,
Nina
It is true! A memoir gives a snapshot of a certain period of one’s life.
I am at the tail end of finishing my memoir and the actually writing part has gone relatively smoothly for the most part, but some aspects of my life were hard to write about at times [finding the perfect words to document an experience and bring it to life can be tough.]
Constance,
Congratulations on getting so much of your memoirs written! I applaud your efforts. You deserve a high five!
Really sounds like a great book to have. I certainly wish I had a memoir written by my sweet mother so I need to do it for my children and grands! Thanks for sharing with SYC.
hugs
Jann
Thanks once again for sharing with Hearth and soul blog hop.
My pleasure to participate in your blog hop! I love viewing other people’s links!
Best,
Nina
Thanks for sharing at Waiting on…Wednesday! Have a super week!
Holly
http://www.iwillservewhileiwait.blogspot.com
Holly,
Thanks for all of your comments! That’s so sweet of you to visit and comment. I’m glad you like the Magic Treehouse series. When my grandson came over the weekend, we pretended to be Jack and Annie! It was fun.
All the best,
Nina
This sounds really interesting. I’ve always wanted to help my grandparents write their memoirs but honestly, I didn’t even know where to begin. I definitely think this could help us stay on track. Thanks so much for the suggestion. Hope you’re having a great day, Coco
CoCo,
Somehow this comment got caught in my spam folder — but you other one didn’t. Weird. Yes, this book could really help people gather their memories and commit them to paper.
Again, thanks for dropping by,
Nina