LifeEcho Blog
Voice memory guides, family storytelling tips, and heartfelt advice on preserving the stories that matter most.
StoryWorth vs LifeEcho: Which Is Better for Your Family?
StoryWorth and LifeEcho both help families preserve stories, but they work in fundamentally different ways. Here is an honest comparison to help you decide which approach fits your family.
The Stories You Still Have Time to Save
Some stories are gone. But the people still living — still answering the phone, still telling stories at dinner — hold stories that can still be saved. Here is what is still possible.
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 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 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.
What We Lose When We Do Not Preserve Stories
When family stories are not preserved, specific things disappear. Not gradually — immediately, permanently, with no possibility of recovery. Here is what those things are.
What We Miss Most After Someone Is Gone — and How to Preserve It Now
After a loss, families consistently discover that what they miss most is not what they expected. Here is what people actually miss — and how to preserve those things before the window closes.
What Your Family Will Treasure Most Someday
The things families most treasure, in retrospect, are almost never the things they expected. Here is what they actually value most — and how to give your family that thing.
Why Consistency Matters More Than Perfection When Preserving Memories
The family that records imperfectly but regularly will build a better archive than the family waiting for the perfect recording session that never happens. Here is why consistency wins.
Why Every Family Should Record Their Stories
Every family believes someone else has more interesting stories. Every family is wrong. Here is why the stories in your family are worth capturing — and what is lost when they are not.
Why Voice Is One of the Most Powerful Forms of Remembrance
We have photographs of the dead going back generations. We have very few recordings of their voices. This asymmetry reveals something important about how we remember — and what voice can do that nothing else can.
Why Voice Memories Matter More Than Photos Alone
Most families have thousands of photographs and almost no voice recordings. Here is why the voice is the dimension of a person that matters most — and why it is the hardest to preserve.