Many people can remember a moment when they wished they had asked one more question.
A question about where their grandparents grew up. How they met. What life was like when they were young. What challenges they faced. What advice they would give after a lifetime of experience.
Unfortunately, these realizations often come after the opportunity has passed.
Grandparents are often the keepers of a family’s oldest stories. They carry memories of people, places, traditions, and experiences that may exist nowhere else. Yet many families assume those stories will always be there to ask about later.
The truth is that family history can disappear surprisingly quickly. A story that has been told for decades can be lost within a single generation if no one takes the time to preserve it.
The good news is that meaningful conversations do not require a formal interview or a long list of questions. Often, a single thoughtful question is enough to unlock a story that has been waiting years to be told.
The questions in this guide are designed to help you start those conversations while you still can.
Instead of asking for dates and details, ask about experiences and memories. Stories are often easier to remember and more enjoyable to share.
Sometimes the easiest way to start a conversation is with a photograph. Old family pictures, letters, and keepsakes can help unlock memories that might otherwise remain buried. A simple question attached to a familiar image often feels more natural than asking someone to recall a story from memory.ny families, one photograph can spark an entire chain of stories.
If you’re looking for more ways to make storytelling feel natural, our guide on how to record family stories explores techniques that help conversations flow more easily.
Many people assume preserving family history means building a complete family tree or researching generations of ancestors. While those projects can be valuable, they can also feel overwhelming.
You do not need to document your entire family history to preserve something meaningful. Start with a single conversation. Ask about a favorite childhood memory, an important life lesson, or a story that has been passed down through the family. One story is infinitely more valuable than a family history project that never begins.
Many grandparents hold family stories that exist nowhere else.
For many families, these conversations reveal stories that even parents may not know. But understanding your family’s story does not stop with one generation. Parents often remember the same people, events, and traditions differently, offering perspectives that can deepen and sometimes even reshape the stories you’ve heard from your grandparents. Our guide on questions to ask your parents can help continue the conversation.
One of the most valuable things grandparents can offer is firsthand perspective on history.
Some of the most meaningful stories come from difficult experiences.
These questions often lead to the most memorable conversations.
Every family eventually reaches a point where stories can no longer be asked for directly.
If you’re ready to begin preserving family stories, Self Told helps families capture and organize meaningful memories over time rather than relying on a single interview or recording session. Learn more about how how Self Told works.
Years from now, the stories you preserve today may become some of the most meaningful gifts you can pass on to future generations.

Prasantha Jayakody is the founder of Self Told, a platform that helps families preserve meaningful stories and memories through guided conversations. Many of the ideas shared in these guides come from his own experience capturing stories with family members and helping early Self Told users do the same.