Showing posts with label Memoir. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Memoir. Show all posts

Friday, February 18, 2011

Memorabilia, The Archives in Our Memoir

It's Guest Friday, and here's Dorothy Ann Skarles with more tips and examples for your memoir.

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By Viterxo13
Memories are quick flashes of past reflections or specific things remembered, like when my son came home and told me he needed fifty dollars to fix his truck.

"You do, do you?" I said, and suddenly recalled how I got my very first fifty dollar bill.

I was in high school, and the school bus dropped me off at my daddy's and mama’s restaurant where we had living quarters.

It was late afternoon, past serving lunch, when I walked in. Daddy, standing behind the counter by the cash register, smiled and asked, "Ready to count the days cash?"

I saw ones, fives, tens, and twenties all lined up in a row in neat piles.  "Sure."

As I began to count, Daddy suddenly pulled out a bill from the cash register and waved it in the air.
By Krug6

"Quick! If you can tell me whose picture is on a fifty dollar bill, I’ll give it to you," he said with a twinkle in his eye.

"General Grant," I shouted so quickly I hardly knew what I said.

Daddy, laughing, slapped the bill down on the counter in front of me. "Pumpkin, it’s all yours."

Dashing off abridged memories is still part of you and your memoir. Make these small moments in time a chapter in the long version of your memoir.

Like the time my husband and I told our young son we were driving across the Golden Gate Bridge.  He looked out the window and said, "No we’re not! I don’t see any gold gate." This is a story I’ve saved for him to read in my own memoir.

So dash off a tiny-sized memory you can save to give to your family.

  1. Did you or someone else do something outrageous or quirky in high school?
  2. Something funny a family member did while you were with them?
  3. Anything happen that was odd while you were dating or getting married?
  4. Do you remember any funny things children did and said—when meeting someone, going to school or at a birthday party?
  5. Did anyone ever give you a ten, twenty, fifty, or hundred dollar bill you didn’t expect?
And how about my high school son who needed 50 dollars to fix his truck. I asked him if he knew whose picture was on the fifty dollar bill, and he didn’t. Bet if you asked him now he would!

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Thanks Dorothy!

Friday, November 19, 2010

Secrets Cause Writer's Block/Create a Memoir #3

Dorothy Ann Skarles is back with another lesson on how to create a memoir.

Lesson 3  Warning! Secrets will cause writer's block.

The telling of a secret may make you feel guilty, but it is the knowledge of family discovering what has been concealed over the years that will stop you from writing your life story.

Three women I know lost courage to write their memoir from the constant fear of what their family would think. A nurse in World War II who was captured by the Japanese and couldn’t bear to tell her experiences. A women who was abused by a family member.  Another, married to a man in the Mafia who cut his picture out of their wedding photo.

People keep secrets for various reasons. They may be afraid of a partner's hostility and possible rejection. They know it is often in the best interest to keep some secrets private. The pressure for truth to be revealed is often responded to poorly. And in the “telling” it does not help to feel rejected, scorned, or stigmatized only because you were trying to work through a serious issue.

There are even times when a secret is spread around like a newspaper, making people think about it more frequently and giving it more importance than it deserves. Then as stress increases and gives you a lot of anxiety, it prevents you from dealing with the problem.

By WarzauWynn
But take heart. To reveal a secret is often helpful. Research shows that the simple task of writing it down makes a person feel better. Seeing the words on paper takes out the sting and lets you make a rational decision on whether you should or shouldn’t tell.

There is another surprising fact to take into consideration. Those agonizing, unresolved problems rooted in the past that dominated your life were known all along to family members. By writing it down, it releases you of your burden. It doesn’t hurt so much or seem so bad or embarrassing.

Time truly does heal a lot of things.

So take the bull by the horns and write that secret down. Get rid of that writer’s block and wondering if you should tell or not tell. “My hateful divorce. Three abortions at eighteen. Giving away my daughter. Why I was in jail. My gamble addiction. Marrying two wives two weeks apart. Borrowing money from Uncle Joe and never paying it back.

After you have finished all the whys and wherefores, date it and hide it away.


By jay
After a few months, read what you have written. Ask yourself:  “If I leave out specific details would my story lack continuity or meaning? Would my life show I dropped into a void where my mind could not heal? Should I risk bad feelings among family members? Should I tell how I really really feel?”

Be honest with yourself and decide. 

Should I or shouldn’t I?

Keep in mind, the road to forgiveness is the pathway to healing, and just as important, if not more so, is our self-forgiveness to heal our own souls. 
On a cautionary note, I'll leave you with a quote from Syrus: “I regret often that I have spoken; never that I have been silent.”

You are in control. The decision is yours alone.

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Dorothy taught memoir writing at Lodi Adult School until her retirement. She is the author of two novels and one non-fiction book—Learning To Write The Easy Way published by Twilight Times Books.

Trying to decide if the writing life is for you? Then start with a very important book Learning to Write the Easy Way for Fun, Posterity, Money by Dorothy Ann Skarles.

Discover your hidden writing talent. Discover your past and present for future generations. Discover the book in you.

Whether you write it as it happened or turn it into a fictional novel, your fond memories and personal experiences can be a book that captures both the past and the present--even if you've never written before.  Dorothy Ann shows how to put your life and times in easy writing steps that combine specific fiction techniques with non-fiction.

It's your life story, and your turn to tell it.

Also available at Twilight Times Books:
(Photo image by Mercedes)