LifeEcho Blog
Voice memory guides, family storytelling tips, and heartfelt advice on preserving the stories that matter most.
What Questions Should I Ask My Dad Before It Is Too Late?
Questions that open up the conversations most fathers and children never quite have — about his life, his values, his inner world, and what he most wants you to know.
What Questions Should I Ask My Mom About Her Life?
The questions that help you really know your mother — who she was before she was your parent, what shaped her, and what she most wants you to understand.
Questions to Ask Your Spouse — for Your Children to Hear Someday
Interview your spouse about their life — childhood, dreams, what parenting has meant, what they want the kids to know. Your children will one day treasure hearing their parents speak honestly about who they are and what they believe.
Recording Bedtime Stories for Your Children: A Lasting Gift
A recording of you reading your child's favorite story is one of the most personal gifts you can create — something they will listen to long after childhood is over.
Why to Record Before a High-Risk Career Starts
Before someone enters military, fire, police, or EMS service, recording who they are at that moment creates a baseline that will matter to their family for the rest of their lives.
Adding Voice to Your Family Scrapbook
Photos capture what your family looked like. Voice captures who they were. Here is how to pair audio recordings with your scrapbook to create something your family will return to for generations.
How to Record a Firefighter's Career Story
A practical guide to capturing the career story of an active or retired firefighter using LifeEcho's guided phone prompts — no tech skills required.
Recording for a Child Who Is Too Young to Remember You
A parent facing serious illness recording for a toddler or infant faces the hardest recording scenario there is. Here is what the child will eventually want to know, and how to give it to them.
Recording When Time Is Measured in Weeks
A practical guide for when time is genuinely short — hospice, late-stage illness, the weeks that remain. What to record first, how to work around physical limits, and how families can help without taking over.
How to Record Family Memories Before Dementia Takes Them
When a parent or grandparent receives a dementia diagnosis, the instinct is to focus on medical plans. But the most irreplaceable thing at risk is not logistics — it is their stories, their voice, and the memories only they carry.
Recording Messages for Your Family Before Deployment
Before you deploy, record your voice for the people who will miss it most. Bedtime stories, birthday messages, and simple 'I love you' recordings give your family something to hold onto while you are away.
Recording Milestone Memories for Your Child's Future
Milestones pass quickly and take their details with them. Here is how to capture the most significant moments of your child's life — in voice, in story, in a way that will last.