Tag Archives: genealogy

Your Stuff, Your Memoir?

14 Jul

I used to think memoir consists of three things: (1) writing, (2) in the first person, (3) about a thin slice of a person’s life. “The reader doesn’t want the whole iceberg, just the tip,” to paraphrase Russell Baker.

Now I realize memoir is much broader. First of all, you have a lot of other objectives–besides the act of writing itself–when you create memoirs. You want to: 

  • record family stories
  • research family history
  • find lost relatives
  • socialize with lost relatives once you've found them
  • discover your DNA
  • collect and preserve family data
  • get over something traumatic
  • tell the story behind a family memento
  • create personal documents (video, audio, shadow boxes, etc.)
  • get rid of something heavy which you've been carrying around (secret, imposition, demand)
  • catalogue, organize, and archive family documents, photos, and memorabilia
  • take the sting out of something painful
  • save and identify family heirlooms
  • capture family information that would otherwise be lost.

I now have a working definition of memoir which is much more broad. Memoir is the communication of what you want to remember and what you want to be remembered. Which leads me to two more points. First, you can get really creative and use any of the following as the basis of a memoir:  

  • letters you quote
  • recipes
  • random memories
  • your hopes for the future
  • a secret you no longer want to keep
  • family sayings
  • something that always got on your last nerve
  • a mystery you never figured out
  • funny family anecdotes
  • what you want your legacy to be
  • describing what’s going on in an iconic family photo
  • a list of your favorite things and why
  • describing how you got around a long time ago
  • how a business used to make money
  • your worst vacation
  • how you kept the house cool in the summer
  • the most expensive thing you ever bought
  • a portrait of a relative using your five senses (see, hear, feel, taste, smell).

Second point. You don’t have to write at all. Lots of your "stuff" can be turned into a memoir:    

  • Photographs
  • Video
  • Audio
  • What things cost
  • Collages
  • Political buttons and pins
  • Jewelry
  • Fabrics
  • A telephone bill
  • “Shrines” you create
  • Scrapbooks
  • Songs
  • Guns
  • Music
  • Portraits
  • Paintings
  • Statues
  • Pottery
  • Drawings
  • Furniture
  • Clothing
  • Games
  • Puzzles
  • Tools
  • Maps
  • Drawings
  • Self-portraits

Even a packing list from 50 years ago could be the basis for a great memoir. So, I ask you:

  • What do you want to remember?
  • What do you want others to remember?

Tell me about the memoir you create. Send me a photo.

Lost in Transliteration

12 Jun

When I moved to Japan, my name changed to Maa-sa Jyu-e-tto, and was written in katakana (not Roman letters), the alphabet reserved for foreign words imported into Japanese. Out of deference to the exigencies of Japanese, I (mis)pronounced my name the way the Japanese did. (more…)

Genetic Genealogy

24 Mar

Genetic Genealogy

I recently attended a lecture at my public library on “Genetic Genealogy,” presented by Blaine T. Bettinger, Ph.D. Genetic genealogy analyzes your ancestral DNA, based on cells you collect from a mouth swab. You send the swab in to a lab and the lab tells you your genetic genealogy going back hundreds, possibly even 1,000 years ago. I thought genetic DNA analysis costs thousands of dollars. No. Only a few hundred. It also doesn’t reveal anything about your medical genetics for people who are concerned about that.

Although there is more than one DNA lab, Dr. Bettinger (www.thegeneticgenealogist.com) recommends www.familytreeDNA.com because it has the largest database–one-half million people have been tested using it. (The larger the database, the easier to find a match to your DNA ancestry.) Women test only the “female DNA,” or mtDNA (mitochondrial DNA), which is passed down from their mothers. Men can test both the mtDNA from their mothers, and the “surname DNA,” or male DYA (YDNA) from their fathers.

Who knew that 90% of Europeans are descended from seven women, known as the seven daughters of Eve? Check out The Seven Daughters of Eve by Bryan Sykes (W. W. Norton, 2001 hardcover, 2002 trade paperback). According to Nielsen Bookscan, the book has sold 100,000 copies in hardcover and paperback combined.

Have you had your DNA analyzed? Do you know where your ancient ancestors came from?  Who said we can’t time travel?