National Write Your Story Day

TL;DR: Most people never write their story because they think it is not important enough, or they are waiting until they have time, or they assume someone else remembers it anyway. They are wrong on all three. I am writing my own memoir right now, eight years of photographing a community that no longer exists, and I have learned that if you do not write it down, it disappears. National Write Your Story Day is March 14. Here is why your story matters more than you think, and why waiting is the one mistake you cannot undo.



The Three Lies That Keep People From Writing Their Story

Most people never write their story for three reasons, and all three are wrong. It does not matter that you are not famous. The record disappears whether you are or not.
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National Write Your Story Day lands on March 14. For most people it passes like any other day, because most people believe their story is not worth telling. They are wrong, and they are wrong in three specific ways.

The first lie is that your story is not important enough. You are not famous, nothing dramatic happened, who would even read it. The second lie is that you will write it later, when you retire, when the kids are grown, when there is time. The third lie is that someone else remembers it, so it is safe.

All three are wrong. Your story does not need to be famous to matter. Later does not come. And nobody remembers it the way you do, which means when you go, your version goes with you.

I Am Writing Mine Right Now

If you do not write it down, it disappears. I am documenting a community that no longer exists. The memoir may be the only place some of it survives.
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I am in the middle of my own memoir. It is called Adventures of a Bellydance Photographer, and it covers eight years, from 2005 to 2013, when I documented the bellydance and renaissance faire communities in California with a camera and showed up to nearly everything.

I did not start out looking for a community. I started out grieving. My wife Claudia died in January 2005, and the months after that were desert hikes and silence. The communities found me before I went looking for them. A renaissance faire, a bellydance stage, a front-row seat I never gave up. For eight years I photographed dancers, faires, birthday parties, and cruises, and somewhere in there I came back to life.

That scene does not exist anymore. It collapsed in 2015 after a controversy that ended one of its biggest festivals, and California bellydance never recovered. Many of the women I photographed in performance are scattered now. A lot of the online record has been deleted or locked away. The photographs I took and the chapters I am writing may be the only place some of it survives. That is what finally made me understand why you write your story. You write it because you are the last witness, and witnesses die.

Your Story Is a Record, Not a Performance

People freeze up because they think writing their story means writing literature. It does not. It means writing the record. What happened, who was there, what it felt like, before the details blur and the people scatter.

You are the only person who knows your story from the inside. Your parents’ marriage, the town that changed, the job that does not exist anymore, the friend nobody else remembers, the version of your city that got paved over. You hold a piece of history that exists nowhere else, and the moment you stop holding it, it is gone.

That is not a performance. It does not need an audience of thousands. It needs to exist. A story written badly and saved beats a story told perfectly and forgotten.

The Form Can Be Anything

The other thing that stops people is the assumption that a memoir has to look a certain way. Born here, then this happened, then that, the end. It does not.

I am writing a second one right now, and it breaks that rule completely. It is called Buttercup, and it tells the story of Claudia’s last years through the eyes of our cat. Buttercup saw everything, the emergencies, the ordinary evenings, the long bad months. So I let her narrate. It is Claudia’s memoir and the cat’s memoir at the same time, and it only works because of the strange angle, not in spite of it.

The lesson is simple. If the straight version feels impossible, find the angle that lets you tell it. A pet’s point of view. A single object. One year instead of a whole life. The unexpected frame is often the thing that finally makes the story come out. There is no correct shape. There is only the shape that gets it written.

Why Later Is the Trap

The most dangerous of the three lies is “later.” Later feels safe because it is always available. There is always next year, always after the next thing settles down.

But memory does not wait for your schedule. Details fade. The people who could confirm what happened get older and pass on. The brother who was there when your father said the thing you have never forgotten will not always be a phone call away. Every year you wait, the story loses fidelity, and some of it is already gone that you do not even know is gone.

I waited years to write my memoir, and in that time the community it documents fell apart and most of its record vanished. I got lucky that I kept the photographs. Most people do not get lucky. They wait, and then there is nothing left to write from but a fog.

How to Actually Start on March 14

Do not start with your birth. Start with one scene. One moment you remember clearly, with people and a place and something that happened. Write that down, badly, in whatever words come. That is a memoir chapter. You now have one more than you had this morning.

Do not write it in order. Memory does not arrive in order, and a story does not have to either. Write the scene that is loud in your head today. Tomorrow write a different one. The shape comes later, after the pieces exist.

If the writing itself stops you, that is what people like me are for. A ghostwriter can pull the story out of you in conversation and put it on the page in your voice. But you do not need anyone to begin. You need one scene and the willingness to write it down before the last person who remembers it is gone. That is the whole holiday. Write your story, because you are the only one who can, and because waiting is the one mistake that does not give you a second chance.

National Write Your Story Day FAQ

When is National Write Your Story Day?
March 14. It is a day set aside to encourage people to start writing their own life stories, memoirs, and personal histories.
I am not famous. Is my story worth writing?
Yes. A story does not need fame to matter. You hold a record of people, places, and moments that exists nowhere else. When you write it down, you preserve something that disappears the moment you stop remembering it.
Where do I start?
Start with one scene, not your birth. Pick a single moment you remember clearly, with people and a place, and write it down in whatever words come. That is your first chapter. Write the scenes out of order as you remember them and find the shape later.
What if I cannot write well?
Writing badly and saving it beats telling it perfectly and forgetting it. The goal is the record, not literature. If the writing itself blocks you, a ghostwriter can draw the story out in conversation and write it in your voice.
Why not just wait until I have more time?
Because memory fades and witnesses pass on. Every year you wait, details blur and the people who could confirm them get older. Later is the one mistake that does not offer a second chance.

📝 Disclaimer

The views and opinions expressed in this blog post are solely those of Richard Lowe and are based on personal experience and research. This content is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as professional legal, financial, accounting, or business advice. Always consult with qualified professionals before making important business or legal decisions. Richard Lowe is not a lawyer, accountant, or licensed professional advisor, and this content does not establish any professional relationship.

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