

"I just don't want them to forget me."
That's the #1 thing grandmothers told us when we asked what worries them most about getting older.
Second place?
"I have a lifetime of stories to share – and I'm terrified they'll die with me."
It's a deeply personal fear. But it's real. Grandchildren grow up fast. They get busy. And without something tangible to hold onto, the details of who you were, like your childhood, your humor, and your wisdom – slowly fade.
So I spent 3 months researching and interviewing people to find the most popular ways grandmothers are preserving their legacy in 2026.
I evaluated each one on:
✅ Emotional depth
✅ Ease of getting started
✅ Lasting impact
✅ How much of you it truly captures
Here's what I found.
#1 – Write your memoir with Memowrite

The only method that captures your whole life – and turns it into something your grandchildren will treasure forever
What it is
Memowrite is a guided memoir-writing service designed specifically for people who don’t have writing experience. It walks you through your life story with 50 thoughtful prompts – your childhood, your family, the moments that shaped you – and then professionally formats everything into a real, beautifully bound keepsake book.
You don't need any writing experience at all – you just need to be willing to remember.
Overview
This was the only method where every single woman I spoke to said: "I wish I had done this years ago."
Barbara, 71, from Ohio, finished her memoir after six weeks. When she gave a copy to her granddaughter on her 16th birthday, the girl read it in one sitting and called her grandmother crying. "Nana, I never knew any of this about you," she said. "I feel like I finally know who you really are."
That's what the other methods on this list simply cannot do.
Memowrite doesn't capture one recipe or one video. It captures you in a form that can be read and re-read for generations.
Results
Emotional depth – Very high
Ease of getting started – Very high
Lasting impact – Very high
Captures "you" fully – Yes
Regrets reported – None
Pros
✅ Guided prompts mean you never stare at a blank page
✅ No writing experience needed – your words, your voice, as-is
✅ AI writing assistant and grammar checker included
✅ Professionally formatted into a real printed keepsake book
✅ Captures your full life story, not just one moment
✅ Grandchildren can read it at any age, now and 50 years from now
Cons
❌ Takes a few weeks to complete – but everyone said it was worth every minute

#2 – Record video stories

Captures your face and voice – but most videos never get watched twice
What it is
Sitting down with your phone or a camera and recording yourself telling stories – your childhood memories, family history, life advice.
Overview
It's a lovely idea, and there's real value in hearing a grandmother's actual voice. But in practice, most families record a few videos, save them somewhere, and rarely return to them. Files get lost. Phones get replaced. And without structure, it's hard to know where to start or when you're done.
Results
Emotional depth – High
Ease of getting started – Moderate
Lasting impact – Moderate
Captures "you" fully – Partially
Pros
✅ Your grandchildren can see your face and hear your voice
✅ No writing required
✅ Can be done at your own pace
Cons
❌ Videos are easy to lose and rarely rewatched
❌ Hard to organize into something coherent
❌ Captures moments, not a whole life story
#3 – Create a family recipe book

A beautiful tradition – but it only tells one side of your story
What it is
Collecting your most treasured recipes, writing notes about where they came from, and compiling them into a printed or handwritten book for your family.
Overview
Grandmothers have been doing this for generations, and there's something genuinely wonderful about it. A recipe book can become a real family heirloom. But it tells your grandchildren what you cooked – not who you were. The woman behind the recipes stays largely invisible.
Results
Emotional depth – Moderate
Ease of getting started – High
Lasting impact – Moderate
Captures "you" fully – No
Pros
✅ Tangible, usable, and deeply nostalgic
✅ Relatively easy to put together
✅ A genuine family keepsake
Cons
❌ Captures a skill, not a life
❌ Your personality, history, and wisdom don't come through
❌ Grandchildren learn your recipes – not your story
#4 – Write letters to be opened at milestones

Deeply personal – but one letter is one moment, not a whole life
What it is
Writing letters to your grandchildren to be opened at specific moments – a graduation, a wedding, a hard day. Sealed, dated, and saved.
Overview
This is one of the most emotionally powerful things on this list. A letter opened at the right moment can mean everything. But it's also limited by design. Each letter speaks to one future moment. It doesn't give your grandchildren the full picture of who you were, where you came from, or what your life really looked like.
Results
Emotional depth – Very high
Ease of getting started – High
Lasting impact – High
Captures "you" fully – No
Pros
✅ Incredibly personal and emotionally resonant
✅ Speaks directly to your grandchild at a meaningful moment
✅ Simple to do – just pen and paper
Cons
❌ One letter = one moment, not a full life story
❌ Grandchildren only receive pieces of you, not the whole picture
❌ Nothing to return to and re-read over a lifetime
#5 – Make a photo memory scrapbook

Wonderful to look at – but photos without context fade in meaning
What it is
Gathering your favorite family photos, adding captions and mementos, and assembling them into a scrapbook by hand or through a printing service.
Overview
A scrapbook is a beautiful object. Grandchildren love flipping through them. But photos without stories are just images. Who are the people in them? What was happening that day? What were you feeling? Without your words alongside them, the meaning slowly disappears as the years pass.
Results
Emotional depth – Moderate
Ease of getting started – High
Lasting impact – Low to moderate
Captures "you" fully – No
Pros
✅ Visual, tactile, and immediately engaging
✅ Easy to start – most families already have the photos
✅ Can be a fun project to work on with grandchildren
Cons
❌ Photos without context lose meaning over time
❌ Captures appearances, not personality or life story
❌ Future generations won't know the stories behind the images
Final word
Every one of these methods comes from a place of love. And any of them is better than doing nothing.
But only one of them gives your grandchildren the full gift – your whole life, in your own words, in a form they can hold, read, and return to forever.
Memowrite is the only method that made every woman who tried it say: "This is the most important thing I've done in years."
If you've ever thought "I should write this all down someday" – this is how you finally do it.

Start your memoir with Memowrite – and become the grandmother they will never forget

Memowrite has already helped over 47,000 grandmothers preserve their life stories for the people they love most.
✅Guided prompts – no writing experience needed
✅Your voice, your words, your whole life story
✅Professionally formatted into a bookstore-quality book
✅Grandchildren can read it at any age, for generations to come
✅The most meaningful gift you will ever give your family
✅4.8 ⭐average from grandmothers who've completed their memoir
"I gave a copy to each of my grandchildren. My oldest called me that night and talked for two hours. We've never been closer."
– Diane, 74, grandmother of six

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