The intention to record a grandparent's life story is one of the most common things people put off. The window feels open indefinitely — until it is not. Health changes. Memory fades. Availability disappears. And by the time the urgency hits, the conversations you meant to have are harder to reach.
This guide is practical. It is about starting the conversation, asking questions that actually work, and keeping what you get somewhere it will last.
Set yourself up for a real conversation, not an interview
The word interview makes people perform. They give you the clean version — the highlights, the things they think you want to hear. What you want is the unguarded version.
Sit with them in their space. Do something together while you talk — cook, look through old photos, go for a drive. Side-by-side conversations produce better stories than face-to-face setups with a microphone on the table. Let them go off-topic. Some of the best material comes from the tangent.
Questions that actually work
Not all at once. Pick two or three per conversation. Come back regularly. The goal is a habit, not a comprehensive interview.
About their early life:
- What did your house look like when you were growing up?
- Who was your best friend as a child and what happened to them?
- What did a normal weekday look like when you were ten years old?
- What was the most scared you ever felt as a kid?
About work and ambition:
- What is the job you worked hardest at and why?
- What did you want to be when you grew up and how did that turn out?
- What do you wish someone had told you when you were just starting out?
About what they believe:
- What do you believe now that you did not believe at thirty?
- What are you most proud of that almost nobody knows about?
- What do you want your grandchildren to know about how you see the world?
What to do with the recordings after.
A voice memo buried in your phone's default app will outlast your phone only if you back it up deliberately. Most people do not. The recording gets lost in an update, a broken screen, or just buried under 4,000 other files named "New Recording."
Options: iCloud and Google Photos back up audio files automatically but store them in a general archive with no context or organization. They are hard to share, hard to find, and not built for a family to access together.
Kinnect keeps voice notes organized in a private shared group, attached to the context of when and why they were recorded, and accessible to the rest of your family. The daily Echo feature also means you can capture a little at a time naturally, whenever a question resonates — instead of relying on one sit-down session to do everything at once.
One conversation, one question, one voice note. That is enough to start. And Kinnect is where you keep it so it actually lasts.
Start free at kinnect.club.