For the storyteller
What you want to live forever. This part of the book is what you want to last. Not just for the people in your life now, but for the ones who'll come after them — great-grandchildren you'll never meet, the family long after.
No pressure to be profound. Some of the most lasting things are simple. A phrase you've lived by. A truth you've earned. A feeling you want passed forward in your own voice.
Begin→ 11 prompts · answer what resonates
All prompts
01 What's something true about being alive that you've earned, that you want to last? — 02 What would you want a great-great-grandchild — someone you'll never meet — to know about you? — 03 What's a phrase, a saying, or a piece of advice you've lived by that you want passed forward? — 04 What would you say — in your own voice — to a great-grandchild you'll never meet, on a day when they need to hear from you? — 05 What do you want people to know about love, based on how you've lived? — 06 What's something you've loved about your life that you want kept — that someone reading this in 50 years can feel through the page? — 07 If you could put one feeling on these pages and have it last forever, what would that feeling be? — 08 What do you want to be remembered for that isn't on a resume — that's harder to describe? — 09 What's a value or way of being that's been a thread through your life — even when nothing else stayed the same? — 10 What would you tell your younger self if you could send one message back? — 11 If your book outlived everyone who knew you personally, what's the one thing you'd want to remain true on the page? —