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Real stories from families who captured their parents' voices—and what they learned in the process
The exact questions that unlock the memories your parents are dying to share (but don't know how to start)
Gentle conversation prompts that make it feel natural, not morbid or forced
Step-by-step templates and frameworks to preserve stories yourself (or know when to get help)
Emotional permission to prioritise this before it's too late—without guilt or overwhelm
Your parents are ageing and you keep thinking "I really should capture their stories"—but haven't started
You feel guilty that you don't know enough about their childhood, their struggles, what shaped them
You've bought journals, downloaded apps, even started recording—but abandoned it all
You're terrified of looking back with regret: "Why didn't I just ask?"
You want a meaningful way to connect with your parents, and your parents with your kids - in a way that will
last forever
"It's easy to say no to this and think 'I'll do it another time.' Now that it's completed, there is nothing else our family should have spent the time doing over those weeks. It's absolutely surpassed my expectations—not just the recordings we got back, but hearing my brother open up in ways he never does. I can't speak more highly of it."
— Laura Frith, Daughter
"The best thing we've done in years. Neil helped us each record our individual memories—now our children and grandchildren will have our voices and stories long after we're gone."
- Jennifer Millard, Mum
"This experience genuinely connected us all together. It gave us an opportunity to let our Dad shine—sharing feelings in our family doesn't come easily. I'd do it again in a heartbeat."
— Tiffany Welsh, Daughter
"Neil uncovers details about my dad that I might never have known otherwise. He's an empathetic listener who asks insightful questions in a way that feels light and fun."
— Stephen Turner, Son
"I think it's wonderful, what you've done. It caters for all shapes and sizes. And I've really rather enjoyed it. Are you writing a book? You should write a book!"
— Frank Watts, Dad