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How I Ensured My Father's Story Would Live for Generations to Come

I saw my father cry twice. The first time was just after my mother died. The next time was when I was gathering the stories of his WWII experiences, because I didn't want them to go away. I spent two years gathering my father's stories -- do you know someone whose story you'd hate to disappear?
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Robb Lucy

This is a story about capturing your family's stories... for generations to come!

I saw my father cry twice. The first time was just after my mother died. The next time was when I was gathering the stories of his WWII experiences. I was collecting those stories because I didn't want them to go away. I wanted generations from now to know who their great, great, great grandfather was.

It was July, 1944. Dad was an artillery man, a gunner and officer in command of a battery of eight 25-pound guns. They were pushing the enemy up the Falaise Road in France. Dad and his best friend were on foot just behind the infantry, not 100 yards from enemy snipers in a church. They were radioing back the target coordinates for their guns. And then, in an instant, his friend lay dead beside him.

At this stage, Dad stopped talking. I could feel the heat coming off his body. He was back there for the second time. He cried softly and I stayed silent until he was ready to talk again. He then said he called for a "Mike Target" -- not just his eight guns, but all 24 guns of the 6th Brigade, 2nd Canadian Division, to rain their firepower on a large area, including the spot he was standing. His rage at the loss of his friend wanted a guarantee the enemy would move.

They moved.

A few months later Field Marshal Montgomery pinned the Military Cross on my father's chest.

I spent two years gathering my father's stories, and then my sister and I turned them into a book that we launched with Dad in front of his friends and family. Everyone has a copy of the book. My father's legacy for future generations, his stories and book, will be read by our ancestors many, many years from now.

So, do you know someone whose story you'd hate to disappear? Have you ever said "I'd love to have their story"? Collecting their stories will be your legacy, too.

Here's how I define "legacy" in my book, Legacies Aren't (Just) for Dead People:

"A Legacy is something I create that connects and enhances lives now, and will continue to positively affect others when I'm gone."

I wrote about one kind of legacy -- telling your own story -- in a previous blog post..

And now, the key is to "gather" others' stories, which will be your legacy and theirs. Don't wait!

"My mother told me the other day there's a lot she'd like to know, but there's nobody left to ask. The door to the past is closed," said Garrison Keillor.

Being aware of what your legacies can be and creating them ensures you and others can enjoy them NOW. There doesn't seem much point in waiting to hear from your eulogist what your legacies are. Seems a little late, eh, wot?

Now, how to gather those memorable, important stories?

Don't worry, you don't have to be a seasoned journalist or interviewer. This is, after all, a conversation. A wise and loved broadcaster once said to me: "I ask simple questions and then get out of the way."

First, let that person know you'd like to talk about their life, their story. Let them know, as Mark Twain once said, that "There was never an uninteresting life. Inside the dullest exterior there is drama, comedy and tragedy!"

Pin a small microphone on your storyteller for audio only or set up your video camera, and then ask the ONLY question you need: 'Tell me about....?'

Tell me about:

• your career

• your family

• your first job

• your first love

• ... and more.

This question -- "Tell me about..." -- gives your storyteller the right to go anywhere they want to go, and they will do that with more energy and detail than if they were asked a more specific question.

Journalist Ellen Goodman said that "What the next generation will value most is not what we owned, but the evidence of who we were and the tales of how we loved. In the end, it's the family stories that are worth the storage."

Don't let their fortune in wisdom, experience and life's lessons disappear. Gather now -- because there's no guarantee your storyteller will be here tomorrow.

If you'd like some of our 35 years of experience, just email.

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