Your mom. Your grandfather. Your great aunt on your dad's side. You.
And not just one story, but hundreds. Stories like how when David met his wife, he walked by her house on the way to work every day for six months just for the chance to talk to her.
Or how Kathy and Dale built their house, one log at a time, while living in their barn — all four kids, including three-year-old Ben, pitching in to help.
These are the stories we hear, the family histories we learn, when we sit down for an Interview of a Lifetime. But mostly what we've learned is that everyone you meet has lived a life worth recording. Has stories that will make you laugh. And cry. And say, "Are you kidding me?!"
And yet it's rare that anyone writes their stories down. And so their life experiences — the things their parents said to them and how they felt at their wedding and what it was like to hold their baby for the first time — get lost. Get forgotten. Go missing from family history.
But these stories deserve to be told and shared with future generations.
At Interview of a Lifetime, we know that family history is important. Let us help you tell your stories and the stories of your loved ones, so they can be shared with generations to come. Learn more here.
Amy D., Interview of a Lifetime customer
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