

I clicked “buy” thinking I’d kill an afternoon.
You know the feeling – one of those “I’ll just poke around and see what this is” decisions.
Maybe I’d answer a couple of questions.
Then I’d move on with my life.
Big mistake.
Reason #1: I accidentally wrote a whole book

I thought I’d breeze through it.
Maybe write down one or two stories “for the kids.”
A few questions here.
A memory there.
Done.
Next thing I know, I’m staring at a 187-page autobiography.
I always thought I have nothing to tell. Apparently, I’m a legend.
Reason #2: My kids know my secrets

This one really backfired.
Ever since they read the book, my phone rings more often.
I can’t nap in the afternoon, ever.
Now I get calls like:
“Wait. You tried to get on the olympic volleyball team?”
“Why did no one tell us about the geese farm?”
“Is this story… true?”
Yes.
Turns out I left out a few details over the years.
Reason #3: My grandkids think I’m a legend

They used to think I was just… around.
You know.
There.
Holding snacks or giving them juiceboxes.
Now they think I’m fascinating.
One of them said, “Grandpa, your life is like a movie.”
So I asked them to find a movie that was like my life.
As of now, they haven’t found anything similar.
Reason #4: It didn’t make me ‘write’ anything

I avoided memoirs because I pictured:
• Blank pages
• Perfect grammar
• Sounding like a philosopher who drinks herbal tea
Meanwhile, my afternoons usually involve a beer and baseball on the TV.
Memowrite didn’t ask me to be poetic.
It asked things like:
“What was the most significant cultural event in your life?”
I typed:
“Christmas with my Grandma. Warm. Safe.”
Boom.
Chapter.
I wasn’t writing.
I was just talking to my screen.
The speech-to-text functionality had me walking around the house like a lunatic.
Reason #5: My wife now wants one too

Huge error on my part.
Now my wife says things like,
“Well if you can write a book…”
I created a monster.
On the bright side, buying her a birthday gift just got a lot easier.
Reason #6: Everyone wants a copy

Printed copies are disappearing.
People are calling dibs.
I’m pretty sure I saw someone hide one behind the fridge.
I did not anticipate a family bidding war.
Here’s the Annoying Part
It was easy.
Memowrite asks 50 simple, surprisingly good questions.
You answer when you feel like it.
They turn it into a real, beautifully written book.
No blank page.
No pressure.
No “I’m not a writer” excuses.
My Only Real Regret…

… is not starting sooner.
Because now my family knows my stories. All of them.
And apparently… they like me more for it.
So yes – I regret buying Memowrite.
Mostly because now everyone wants their own memoir and somehow this is my fault.
AS SEEN IN:

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