Recording your family’s stories can be one of the most meaningful projects you take on—but it’s easy to get overwhelmed or accidentally miss the moments that matter most. Whether you’re interviewing a loved one or trying to tell your own story, avoiding a few common missteps can make all the difference.
Here are the biggest pitfalls we see—and what to do instead.
The most common regret we hear? “I wish I had done this before they passed.”
Memories fade, life gets busy, and time runs out faster than we expect. Starting early ensures you capture the details, voice, and presence of someone while they can still tell their story in their own words.
Don’t wait for the perfect moment or setup. Start small. Even a single recorded story or photo caption is better than none.
If you only ask “Where were you born?” and “What did you do for work?”, you’ll get a resume—not a story. The richest details come from emotional, reflective prompts that go beyond facts.
Mix in open-ended questions like:
Tayle includes these kinds of deeper prompts automatically, so you don’t have to come up with them on your own.
Capturing a full life story in a single session can be exhausting—for both the interviewer and the storyteller. It often leads to rushed answers, skipped details, or abandoned efforts.
Break things into shorter, focused sessions. Tayle structures interviews into hour-long blocks, which helps people go deeper without getting fatigued. Bonus: it gives time between sessions for new memories to surface.
A lot of people shy away from sensitive topics—grief, mistakes, difficult chapters—but those are often the parts of life that carry the most wisdom and emotional truth.
Approach with care, but don’t avoid it. You can ask:
Stories don’t have to be polished—they just have to be honest.
It’s easy to collect stories and then forget to do something meaningful with them. Files get lost. Devices crash. The storyteller never gets to see their story take shape.
Make it part of your family’s living memory. Print it. Share it privately online. Revisit stories together. Tayle makes it easy to turn stories into interactive web pages or printed books—but even if you’re using your own method, be sure to create something lasting and accessible.
Preserving a life story doesn’t have to be perfect. What matters most is that you do it—with care, with curiosity, and with consistency.
Avoiding these common mistakes will help you create something your family can cherish—not just today, but for generations to come.