LifeEcho Blog
Voice memory guides, family storytelling tips, and heartfelt advice on preserving the stories that matter most.
How to Interview a World War II or Korean War Veteran
The last World War II and Korean War veterans are in their 90s and 100s. Every recording made now is historically irreplaceable. Here is how to approach the interview respectfully, what to ask, what not to push on, and how to handle difficult memories.
Questions to Ask a Gulf War Veteran
Gulf War veterans are in their 50s and 60s — still working, still present. Their stories feel recent enough that families often defer recording them. That is a mistake. Now is the right time.
Questions to Ask a Korean War Veteran
Korean War veterans are among the oldest living Americans who served in uniform. Their conflict is often called the Forgotten War, and many of their stories have never been fully recorded. The window is closing.
Questions to Ask a Marine Veteran
Marines carry a fierce institutional identity that runs through everything they say about their service. These 20 questions help you reach the human story behind that identity — without flattery and without missing what matters.
Questions to Ask a Navy Veteran
Navy service has a character unlike any other branch — ships as a world unto themselves, months at sea, ports that shaped a person's understanding of the world. These 20 questions help you record a Navy veteran's story fully.
Questions to Ask a Space Force Guardian
The U.S. Space Force is the newest branch of the armed forces. Its Guardians are building a culture and history in real time. These questions help record that story — now, while it is still being written.
Questions to Ask a Vietnam Veteran
Vietnam veterans carry one of the most complicated legacies in American military history. This guide offers questions that open conversation without demanding the reliving of trauma — and explains why listening is the whole point.
Questions to Ask an Army Veteran
Army veterans served across every era and in every kind of role — from infantry to logistics to medical to intelligence. These 20 questions work for any Army veteran, with guidance on how to go deeper based on when and where they served.