The Book of Your Life
| September 26, 2011
becomes misty in retrospect very quickly. It slips through our fingers” says
Sarah Shapiro a writer and memoirist. “When you write it down you see it with
greater depth and understanding. To preserve life with words is to treasure
it.”
As we contemplate our actions from the past year
most of us will encounter blank spots. It’s hard enough to remember our deeds
and shortcomings from the prior week let alone all of last year. Memoirists
and even those who keep a regular diary have an advantage: By putting words
down on paper they cement the memories in their minds often processing the
life experience as they write.
“Those three years that I was writing a daily journal
methodically in detail with a passion for recording everything accurately and
as truthfully as I could are the only ones I remember well ” says Sarah who
wrote about her life as a young mother in her first book Growing With My
Children. For a long time
after she finished the memoir she missed how her life was enhanced when she
was keeping that diary every day with devotion. “Once I stopped it was more
hit and miss if I’d remember something.
like being a young mother at that stage of life with young children. And for
my children — who now have kids the same age as they were then — it’s a record
of their childhoods.”
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