LifeEcho Blog
Voice memory guides, family storytelling tips, and heartfelt advice on preserving the stories that matter most.
What Grandchildren Wish They Had Asked Their Grandparents
The war stories never told. The recipes never written down. The family history that lived in one person's memory and died with them. Here is what grandchildren wish they had asked — and what you can still ask if you have the chance.
What Is an Oral History and How Do You Start One?
Oral history is the practice of recording people telling their own stories in their own words. You do not need academic training to do it. Here is what oral history is, where it came from, and how your family can start one today.
What Is the Best Age to Start Preserving Memories for Your Children?
The honest answer is: now, whatever your age. But different ages offer different things — and the recordings made at thirty are not the same as the ones made at sixty.
What Military Spouses Should Record
Military spouses carry a story that is rarely told in full — the deployments managed alone, the moves, the long ordinary hard days. Here is why their perspective deserves to be preserved, and what to record.
What Parents Should Record for Their Graduate
Before your child walks across that stage, there are recordings you should make — not just a proud speech, but specific messages for the moments in their future that you already know are coming. Here's what to record, and how to make it feel real.
What Should You Record for Your Kids?
A common question with a simple answer: more than you think, and starting sooner than feels necessary. Here is a practical guide to what to record for your children — and why it will matter more than you expect.
What Stories Grandparents Should Record for Their Families
Grandparents hold stories their families will never find anywhere else. Here are the specific categories of stories most worth capturing — and why each one matters.
What to Record Before a Parent Moves to Assisted Living
The transition to assisted living is a moment of enormous change. Before the move, while your parent is still in their home, there are stories and memories worth recording that will not be accessible the same way afterward.
What to Record for Your Family During a Health Journey
A health crisis often clarifies what matters most. Here is how to use that clarity — what to record for your family, how to make the recordings sustainable, and what they will carry for generations.
What Should I Record for My Children to Hear Later?
The recordings your children will treasure most are the ones that tell them who you truly are — not just as their parent, but as a person with a full history, a set of beliefs, and things you have always wanted to say.
What to Record for the Person You Love Most
Recording for a spouse or life partner is the most intimate of all legacy recordings. Here is what your partner most needs to hear, what not to do, and how to make recordings that feel like you — not like a goodbye.
What to Record on a Random Tuesday
The biggest myth in memory preservation is that recordings should wait for special occasions. The ordinary Tuesday is exactly what families most want to hear later.