After Decades of Photographing the World, I Finally Was Able To Capture My Soul

2.389 Bewertungen und laufend
WIE GESEHEN IN:
There was a time my life moved so fast I could barely keep up with it.
War zones, evacuations, front-line chaos.
For decades I ran toward the world’s darkest places with a camera in my hand.
Now I come home to no family waiting.
Just a house so quiet I sometimes leave the radio on to hear a voice that’s not my own.
While sorting old negatives, I found a photo of an empty street in Phnom Penh taken minutes after an evacuation.
The quiet in that image felt too familiar.
The Stranger Who Asked the Right Questions
One afternoon, my neighbor’s son Liam came by to return a book.
He’s a young photographer. Good eye. Curious.
And he noticed the Phnom Penh photo on my table.

“You took this?” he asked.
I nodded.
He sat down and asked questions that opened up parts of my past I’d shoved away.
Then he looked at me and said,
“Richard… your stories live only in your head. Don’t let them disappear.”
He didn’t say it with pity, just honesty.
The idea didn’t feel overwhelming.
It felt… necessary.
I wanted to gift myself the chance to let these memories breathe.
To lighten the weight I’d been carrying alone.
So I searched for a way to do exactly that.
I looked through hundreds of reviews before I found Memowrite.
Why I Started
No grandchildren to impress.
No kids begging me to “write it all down.”
Just me. Gifting myself a way to tell all my memories.
What surprised me most was how unintimidating Memowrite felt:
50 thoughtful questions.
Simple screen.
Unlimited photos.
Calming colors.
No strict deadlines.
So I tried one question.
“Tell us about a friendship that has stood the test of time or a bond that's unbreakable”
I wrote about the night when I carried a wounded reporter to a medic station – a man I barely knew, who later became my closest friend.
When I finished writing, something stirred in my chest:
My story still carries the weight of the man I used to be.
And for the first time in a long time, I wanted to keep going.
Why I Continued
I didn’t plan a routine. It just happened.
Every evening, when the house got too quiet, I’d answer one question.

Ten minutes. Sometimes twenty.
It became a lifeline – something to keep the loneliness from swallowing me whole.
The questions guided me in, slowly, letting me write without pressure.
Not perfectly, just honestly, in the way the memories actually live in me.
And as I added old photos to my book the stories started connecting.
For the first time, it all felt like one life, not scattered pieces.
But the real surprise came later.
How I Found Connection
One evening I brought my laptop to the photography meet-up Liam talked me into.
Just a handful of people talking lenses and projects.
Near the end someone asked,
“So, Richard, shooting anything lately?”
I said, “No… just writing down the backstories behind my old photos.”
They asked if I’d share one.
I read the story of the colleague who’d worked beside me for years – and the day a single shell landed closer to him than to me.
When I finished, there was a brief, thoughtful pause.
Then one of the members nodded slowly and said,
“You should bring more of these stories next time. I’d like to hear them.”
It wasn’t much.
But it was the first invitation I’d received in years.
And I went home feeling something I hadn’t felt in a long time:
like I still had a place in the world.
The Book I Made for Me – And the People It Brought
When my Memowrite book arrived I didn’t intend to show it to anyone.
I’d chosen a deep green hardcover (reminded me of the Cambodian jungle) and used one of my old photos as the cover image.

What I didn’t expect was the quality.
The paper felt thick. The printing was crisp.
It looked like something a publisher would have made – not something I created from my living room.
And it was mine. My proof that my life had been real.
But at the next meet-up, someone asked if I’d brought it.
I slid it across the table.
They passed it around carefully and asked questions.
And without meaning to, I had found a small circle of people who wanted to know me.
Not the quiet older man at the end of the street, but the man I’d been.
Now we meet every week.
Sometimes to talk photography. Sometimes to talk life.
The silence at home feels different now.
Not heavy. Not empty.
Just… quiet. The good kind.
Why This Was the Gift I Needed Most
I didn’t buy Memowrite to “leave a legacy.”
I bought it so I wouldn’t lose myself.
But in the process I found people who saw me for who I am.
Writing my story didn’t fix my loneliness overnight – but it changed how I lived with it, and eventually it led me out.
This wasn’t a gift for an audience.
It was a gift to myself.
And it brought me back to life.

WIE GESEHEN IN:
Echte Bewertungen von echten Kunden
Meine Geschichte zu schreiben, fiel mir leichter, als ich es mir je vorgestellt hatte.
Margarete D.
"Ich habe immer gedacht, dass es zu schwer oder emotional wäre, meine Lebensgeschichte zu schreiben, aber Memowrite machte es einfach. Die Fragen führten mich sanft, und ehe ich mich versah, hatte ich ein echtes Buch voller Erinnerungen, die ich seit Jahren nicht mehr geteilt hatte. Es fühlte sich heilend an."
Jetzt werden meine Enkelkinder wissen, wer ich wirklich war
Peter H.
"Ich wollte schon immer Dinge für meine Familie aufschreiben, aber ich wusste nie, wo ich anfangen sollte. Memowrite gab mir die Struktur, die ich brauchte, und verwandelte meine Erinnerungen in etwas, das sie schätzen werden. Es ist eines der besten Dinge, die ich je getan habe."
Ich dachte nicht, dass meine Geschichte wichtig ist...
Linda F.
"Ich war mir nicht sicher, ob sich jemand für meine Lebensgeschichte interessieren würde, aber das Beantworten der Memowrite-Fragen ließ mich erkennen, wie viel ich schon erlebt habe. Meine Tochter weinte, als sie die ersten Seiten las. Es ist ein großartiges Geschenk."
Überraschend unterhaltsam und zutiefst bedeutungsvoll
Georg M.
"Ich dachte, das würde sich wie Hausaufgaben anfühlen, aber es wurde zu einer der angenehmsten Aktivitäten, die ich seit Jahren gemacht habe. Am Ende habe ich Geschichten geschrieben, die ich seit Jahrzehnten niemandem erzählt hatte. Jetzt sagen meine Kinder, dass sie mich besser verstehen."
Es weckte Erinnerungen, von denen ich dachte, ich hätte sie verloren
Evelyn R.️
"Ich hätte nie erwartet, beim Ausfüllen der Memowrite-Fragen so emotional zu werden. Es war, als würde ich in meinem Kopf ein altes Fotoalbum öffnen. Das fertige Buch ist wunderschön und ich bin stolz auf das, was ich geschaffen habe."



