Prepare for your future and protect your loved ones. If you were suddenly unable to work due to an accident what would you do? If you are healthy, currently not disabled, make $18,000 per year or more, you may qualify for disability insurance. To Request a Free Quote and Insiders Guide to Disability Insurance Click Here.
|
|
Caring for an elderly parent or a child with special needs? Caregiver's Touch keeps critical information at your fingertips, helps you care for loved ones, and manage life's responsibilities.
|
|
Family
stories casually chatted about at the dinner table, or regaled again and
again at family gatherings can parallel great epics or notable short stories.
The memorable stories
of our lives and of others in our family take on special importance because they are
true, even if everyone tells different versions of the same event.
These tales
are family heirlooms held in the heart not the hand. They are a gift to each
generation that preserves them by remembering them and passing them on.
Families
that have contributed their personal stories to this website include: Allen, Andrew
and Daniel Brereton, Brian
Lambke, Dan, Diane, Haruna, Helen, Martha, Monica, Sheila and Stacey,
Stephanie, Steve, and Terry
Scott Cohen.
Listening
The first step to collecting family stories is to become a good listener. Good listeners encourage
great storytelling. When a speaker feels that the listener is interested, he or she is more inspired
to communicate generously. A good listener gives full attention to the teller, does not interrupt or
contradict the facts of a story as it is being told, and offers the teller encouragement with an interested
facial expression and body stance. When a teller feels encouraged by an interested listener, there is
joy in the telling. Interviewing Elders
An effective way to hear family stories is to ask questions. Family stories
can be collected by interviewing a family elder. Make a mental or written list
of topics that might generate some questions to ask the elder.
Questions about:
People, places, events, objects, important transitions, work, or travel can
be story starters. Although short-term memory may sometimes be limited in the
oldest of relatives, long-term memory may be very much intact. We need to help
the teller journey back in time to retrieve these treasures.
Interview Questions
Here are some effective questions that might encourage elders to remember their
stories.
Important Transitions
Interview questions about Places To Remember:
Can you describe the house in which you lived when you were a child?
Do you remember the room in which you slept as a child?
Can you describe the houses in your neighborhood?
Where was your favorite place to visit when you were a child?
Where did you go to school? What was in the classrooms?
Where did you go to worship?
Where did you go to shop for food or clothes?
Where did you go for fun and recreation?
Where did you go when you wanted to hide?
Did your family ever move?
Describe the house you lived in when you were first married.
What kind of utensils did you have in the kitchen?
Interview questions about People To Remember:
Who lived in your house with you as a child?
How many brothers or sisters lived there?
Can you describe your father or mother as you remember looking at them when
you were small?
Who visited your house when you were young?
Any relatives remembered? Grandparents or Aunts and Uncles?
Who were your favorite cousins?
Who were your neighbors?
Did you have any favorite teachers?
Who was the best cook in the family?
Who was the smartest, richest, kindest, or most religious?
Did anyone in the family have some unusual characteristics?
Interview questions about Life Events:
Immigration:
When did the first family member come to America? Where did they come from?
How did they get here? Are any family members still abroad?
Courtship:
How did you meet your spouse? How long did you know each other before you were
married? Can you describe your wedding?
Work:
How did you earn a living when you were young? What was your first job?
Holidays:
What were your favorite holidays? Did you have special holiday customs or foods?
Vacations:
Did you ever go on a vacation? Where? Who went with you? What did you do for
fun?
Births:
Can you describe the birth of your son or daughter? Where were you? Who was
there? How did you choose his or her name?
Daily Life:
How did you travel from place to place? Did your family have a car? What were
your favorite pastimes? How did your children behave?
Interview questions about Objects:
Photos:
Go beyond the edges of the photo when looking at family pictures:
Where was the picture taken? Who took the picture, for they are not in the
photograph but must have been in the place? Why were the people in the photo
gathered? How are they related? Why were they together at this moment? What
were they doing?
Jewelry:
Who wore the jewelry? Why was it given? Did it mark a special occasion?
Utensils or Family Recipes:
Who used it? Where did they live? How was it used?
Furniture:
Where was the furniture originally? Can you describe the rest of the house?
Interview questions about Important Transitions:
Try devising some of your own questions about these topics: Birth in the family,
Growing Up, Change of Jobs, New Houses, Going Off to School, Getting Married,
Funerals in the Family
Tips:
Ask where the story took place.
Ask who was in the story.
Ask what happened in the story.
These types of questions may lead you to hear a family story that has a clear
setting, believable characters, and a plot. "How did it end?" may
offer a conclusion.
Grandchildren Interviewing Grandparents:
When grandparents are encouraged by their grandchildren to speak about their
own children when they were young, a child is offered an interesting perspective
on their own parents. Their Parents Were Once Kids Too!
|