Family Pearls, Family Peace
[How
family memoirs can bring peace and understanding between generations]
by
Joyce M. Coleman
You toss and turn, trying to wake up from a recurring
nightmare that has you in its grip. Four generations
of family members are descending on your house
for this year’s Christmas dinner. It’s
suppose to be a happy occasion, so why are you in a cold sweat? Tension
rises and tempers flare. God forbid, they aren’t coming to dinner! They
live with you. Your
daughter-in-law flees from you, stung by your simple request to be quiet
already, she’s getting on your last good nerve.
Your mother-in-law tells you for the umpteenth time how lucky you
are to have snagged her son. Your
grandchildren are trying to hide a snicker about
the weird way you and great-grandma talk and dress.
You
are seriously ticked off because your mother and mother-in-law refuse to
accept the undeniable fact that you are a grandparent, and should be
respected accordingly. You
and your
husband are beside yourself, and out of frustration you act like enemies
instead of
each other’s support system.
All
in all, it is a dream from hell.
And
then you wake up and discover that it isn’t a dream after
all. Although
statistics show that intergenerational families are a
common occurrence, it is still one of the least talked about family
situations. We
women seldom talk about it, because we don’t want to embarrass our loved
ones. We bear our burdens,
almost in silence,
sharing our frustrations only with our few remaining
friends.
If this
situation hasn’t come to your house yet, not to
worry. It will. Give it a
year or two. If you are a
baby
boomer like me, and fortunate enough to have a living parent (or parents),
it will come. And sadly, time is not with us with regard to keeping this
repository of wisdom and information with us forever.
We need to capture it while time
permits.
We
Boomers don't think of ourselves as "older," but let's face
it, we are the generation most able to articulate our accumulated
experiences, wisdom, and other information critical to helping our
children, grandchildren, and those not yet born understand why they are
the way they are. Our knowledge
holds the key to their recognizing if not avoiding sand traps, and other
dangerous situations.
Here’s
the good news. There is no need to be a victim of this
situation, or wait until all we can say is I shoulda, woulda, coulda.
You have the capacity to change things, to bring understanding and
joy into your intergenerational family.
You have the capacity to capture history and share it with
generations to come. There
is nothing that brings a
sense of purpose, self-esteem, and fulfillment like having a formal,
documented account – memoirs, if you will – that chronicles
your own history.
The
process has three simple steps and is actually a lot of fun.
Step
1: Create your own memoirs,
or become an angel of mercy
and help an older family member get started.
If two or more
like each other’s company, consider collaboration among family members.
What about your childhood home? A
picture really is worth a thousand words.
Draw a picture of it that will literally “map” this part of
your story. You don’t have
to be Picasso. Start with a
rectangle, about the size of a regular sheet of paper.
Draw your house. Lay out your street, then the streets in your neighborhood.
Who were the people and what were they like?
What were you favorite places?
Why? Maybe you didn’t exactly live “on a street.”
My “map” included our house, yard, chickens, corn crib, ditch,
a path through the patch and another leading “up the pasture.”
Everything we did contributed to getting food, getting our lessons, going
to church, and the normal games siblings play on each other.
The main characters were my family, dominated by my mother
and grandfather. Whatever else I wrote about, these were recurring people
and themes.
Next,
write down everything you remember about each part of the
picture you’ve just drawn. Write it as it comes to you. Give depth and
character to your pictures. Write
what you feel. Keep
writing until you can actually smell the food, reach out and touch your
favorite chair, or hear your mother’s voice calling to you. You’ll
have time later to sort it all out. Some
of it will make you weep, and others will
have you rolling on the floor with glee.
Now
determine what most vividly touched your early life. Was it family,
school? Did you move
frequently? You have to feel
strongly about it in order to help others “see” why you feel the way
you do.
Challenge
your memory. Family members
come in handy here.
See
if they remember it the same way you do.
Be careful not to get into memory turf wars.
Each of us jealously guards our recollections;
they make up who we are. So
be gentle. This
is suppose to be fun, and these are your memoirs.
Use
facts to give your memoirs authenticity and accuracy. Your
local library is a great place to start.
Property records
at a county recording office will clarify who owned the property next to
you (and you thought they were aliens). Court records will tell you who
was married to whom (oops!).
Probate
records show death and inheritances.
Department of Education records
recount the public education grandma and Aunt Tilda received.
Police records might allay your suspicions about your ancestors, or
confirm your runaway suspicions.
You might find information that shows an entirely
different perspective from that you have carried all your life.
When
you revisit your early life, you’ll discover that each day,
week, month, and year present wonderful fodder for your memoirs.
Block these periods. Let your memory take you across each
landscape. Write what you
see. Soon you will be able to
capture the essence of experiences
and activities that made you who you are. Don’t stifle your reactions to
them, even those you would just as soon forget.
You survived, didn’t you. If
you’re reading this, you’ve done better
than simple survive; you’re taking charge of your life.
As
you work through each blocked period, look for the these elements
within your memories, and how you feel about the impact each had on your
life.
Church
School
Teachers
Most influential adult
Historical events
Happiest event
Most frightening event
Proudest moment
Most embarrassing event
Your first love
Locate
all the pictures of people, places, and things you can get your hands on.
Pictures, historical fact, and the role each had in your life make
for dynamic and interesting reading.
Congratulations.
You have taken the first steps to writing your
memoirs.
Step
2:
Lay
out your information and pictures in
chronological order. Use historical events to frame your stories. This
makes your memoirs an excellent resource for teaching local history,
sharing heritage, and instilling pride in family legacy.
Step
3:
Prepare for gift-giving, as your memoirs make a thoughtful and
lifelong gift for loved ones.
Listen
to this presentation here.