
Is this how you want to be remembered?
Like this?

Or is this the way you want to be remembered?

If you just want to hear your mom or dad’s voice one more time…If you wanted to describe your parents to your grandkids, would you be able to give them a clear picture of who your parents were? Would your grandkids be able to hear your parents’ voices, feel the environment they grew up in 3 dimensions if all you had to remember them by was a grainy photo with faded scribbling on the back? On the other hand, would video and audio of them, plus photo images and songs they chose help make their lifes’ experiences a more dynamic life experience and give you a full understanding of your parents’ generation, or even multiple generations.
To be passed down for future generations to enjoy and learn from, imagine the value of being able to access video, audio, music about the environment you and your ancestors lived in. But how can your descendants learn from your life, benefit from the good choices and not so good choices you made, and recognize pieces of themselves that came from you and other generations?
The Answer
My Life’s Notes is a digital locker to store and preserve valuable memories you have and will make during your lifetime. You can record something quickly on your smartphone anywhere, or you can sit and add longer pieces through any computer either verbally or by typing. It is a treasure chest in which to put pictures, videos, recorded voices, songs…any kind of attachments that will create unlimited memories for you later in life and a better way for those who access the information in the future. Each entry is date and time stamped and you can always edit or delete entries if so desired.
Moreover, it is to each of our benefit now that we sometimes pause, keep notes, store joyful stories, verbalize pain and grief, recognize events and all the elements that comprise our life experience.
Finally, My Life’s Notes can be passed from the original owner to an “heir” or “heirs”, who can continue entering life notes and create a new life summary, and then pass the program on to their heirs to create a multigenerational family record.