

My life became more interesting than a movie when I came to America.
After the revolution in Iran, this was the place I chose so my family could live without fear.
Back home, I was an engineer. In the U.S., I had to start again.
I did honest work that helped us build a new life – construction, warehouses, whatever was needed.
I kept telling myself it wouldn’t last long. It did.
So I raised my children, saved carefully, and learned endurance.
When retirement came, it wasn’t about pride.
It was about knowing we had made it – saved enough to rest.

Then the days slowed down.
I felt like I had too much time on my hands.
Yet on my birthday, my daughter handed me a small card.
Inside was a Memowrite login.
She said, “You’re always telling these stories about your life before the revolution. I don’t want them to disappear.”
At first, I resisted.
I didn’t want to sit in front of a blank page and fail at that too.
Yet I had a feeling that since I have nothing to do, I should at least try.

Memowrite didn’t ask me to write a book.
It asked me questions.
One at a time.
About my childhood.
My first job as an engineer.
The day I came to the U.S. and appreciated the calm.
The years I worked construction and told no one how hard it felt.
These questions pulled out the deepest memories I had hidden – you should see for yourself.

Over time, the pieces came together.
Not polished.
But honest.
When I finished, I printed a few copies.
I didn’t announce it.
I didn’t promote it.
I gave one to my daughter.
She brought it to one of her Pilates classes, almost as a joke.

Someone asked what it was.
She said,
“My dad wrote a book about coming here as an engineer and starting over.”
That night, she got 3 text messages.
“Yasmin, can I borrow it?”
“My husband would relate to this.”
“My father lived this.”
The book started moving.
From one kitchen table to another.
From parents to children.
From immigrants who had never spoken about their past to people who finally asked.
Strangers began calling me by my first name in grocery stores.
Men I barely knew shook my hand and said,
“You wrote what I never could.”
Then the questions changed.
“Can you help my son with math?”
“Can you talk to her? She’s about to give up on her engineering studies.”
That’s how I started tutoring.

We sit at my dining table.
Sometimes we do math.
Sometimes we talk.
I tell them the truth:
Your path may not be straight.
But your mind is still yours.

I didn’t write the book to become known.
I wrote it so my life wouldn’t vanish quietly.
Memowrite gave me a way to remember.
Somehow, those memories ended up building something new.
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Ida Zbirochowicz
8 Sep, 2025 at 2:14 pm
I lived through the events of the cold war period in Europe, escaped to Vienna by a special train with my money hidden in the toillet bowl. Then without my document worked…….
Nur Rachmi
24 Jul, 2025 at 1:50 pm
I’m 63, and I’ve been thinking along this line, to start preparing a memoir.
Anne
23 Jul, 2025 at 10:05 pm
This would be a great idea! I never know what or where to start!
Elena GRAJALES pereyra
23 Jul, 2025 at 6:50 pm
I would love to give it a try
susanne scholtz
23 Jul, 2025 at 5:19 pm
I would love to do this