Some things were never written down.
Some stories never made it into textbooks, yearbooks, or family albums.
But we remember.
And remembering is sacred work.
This series is about that work.
It’s about the way your grandmother told the same story every Thanksgiving, and how now, no one else tells it quite like she did.
It’s about how a photo with soft edges can hold an entire summer.
It’s about how memory is a kind of rebellion—especially when the world keeps trying to forget us.
Memory Is More Than Nostalgia
Memory isn’t just “the past.”
It’s culture.
It’s survival.
It’s how we build a future that makes sense—because we remember who we are.
In a time of deep forgetting—digital noise, banned books, AI hallucinations—memory becomes radical.
To remember is to say: we were here, and we mattered.
Why This Series, Why Now
I created this series because I know I’m not the only one asking:
What happens to our stories when we’re gone?
How do we capture the magic of everyday moments?
How can we share memories in ways that feel sacred, not performative?
Whether you’re a family archivist, a spiritual keeper of lineage, a writer of truths, or someone quietly holding a box of old photos—this series is for you.
What to Expect
Each post will offer:
Real talk about what it means to keep and share memory
Creative ways to archive, record, and honor stories
Prompts and rituals you can try alone or with others
Reflections from my own memory work journey
Opportunities to share your own memory magic with me
Let’s Start Here
You don’t have to write a memoir.
You don’t need fancy tech.
All you need is this:
A memory that still lives in you.
Big or small. Sharp or blurry. Funny, painful, sacred, ordinary.
Tell me: What’s one memory that changed you?
Reply here. Whisper it to your notebook. Speak it aloud.
Let’s begin the work of remembering—together.
Next Post:
Ways to Capture a Memory (Without Getting Overwhelmed)
If this spoke to you, hit subscribe and share it with someone who holds stories close.
We build the archive together.
A memory that changed me is living in Greece the locals wanted to take pictures with me and my sister because they’d never seen an African American person in real life.