Wednesday, April 22, 2026

How to Write Your Own Life Story Even If You Think You Are Not a Writer

 Most people who should write down their life story never do.


Not because they are lazy. Not because their life is not interesting. Because they sit down to start and a voice in their head tells them they are not a writer. That their grammar is not good enough. That nobody would want to read it. That they would not know where to begin.


Every single one of those objections is wrong. And this post is going to tell you exactly how to prove it.


The Most Important Thing to Understand First


A life story is not a novel. It is not a memoir published by a major press. It is not something that needs to impress a stranger or earn a review.


A life story is a gift to the people who will miss you when you are gone. To your children and grandchildren. To descendants who will never meet you but who will want to know who you were.


Those people do not care about your grammar. They do not care if your sentences are simple. They care that you wrote it down at all. They care that the voice on the page sounds like you.


The bar for this is not excellence. The bar is honesty. And you already know how to be honest.


How to Actually Start


Do not start at the beginning. Starting at the beginning is what makes people freeze. Nobody knows exactly where their story begins. If you try to start with your birth and work forward you will spend days trying to figure out how to set up the context and never write a single real memory.


Instead start with something specific.


Pick one memory. It does not have to be important. It does not have to be dramatic. Just pick something you remember clearly. The smell of a specific place. A conversation that stuck with you. The way someone laughed. A moment that for some reason you have never forgotten.


Write about that one thing. Write it the way you would tell it to a friend sitting across from you at a kitchen table. Use your own words. Write the way you talk.


That is your first entry. It does not need to be long. A paragraph. Half a page. Whatever comes out.


What to Write About


Once you have written one memory write another one next week. Then another. Over time you will have a collection of moments that together form a picture of a life.


Here are some starting points if you need them.


Write about where you grew up. Not a general description. A specific detail. The sound the screen door made. The corner store and who ran it. The smell of the kitchen on a specific kind of day.


Write about the hardest thing you have ever been through. You do not have to share it with anyone. But writing it down matters. Hard experiences are part of the full picture of a life and they are often where the most important things happened.


Write about the people who shaped you. A parent. A teacher. A friend you lost. A stranger who said something that stayed with you for decades. Write about what they were like in specific terms. Not that they were kind. How their specific kindness showed up in a specific moment.


Write about what the world looked like when you were young. What was different. What things cost. What people worried about. What was normal that is now gone. Future generations will find this extraordinary.


Write about your children or grandchildren. What they are like right now at this exact moment. What they do that makes you laugh. What they say that surprises you. These details will be gone faster than anything else because children change so fast.


Where to Keep It


A notebook works. A document on your computer works. A blog works. The Internet Archive works.


The best format is the one you will actually use. If you are more comfortable writing by hand then write by hand and scan the pages later. If you are more comfortable typing then type. If you are more comfortable talking then record yourself and have it transcribed.


The only rule is to put it somewhere it will survive. Not just on your phone. Not just in one place. Multiple copies in multiple locations.


And tell someone it exists. Tell your family where to find it. The best preserved document in the world is useless if nobody knows it is there.


You Have Already Lived History


Every person who reads this blog has lived through things that future generations will study. A global pandemic. Economic upheaval. Technology changing everything faster than anyone expected. A world that looks completely different from the one that existed twenty years ago.


You experienced that. From the inside. With your specific eyes and your specific life circumstances.


Write it down. Not because you are famous. Because you were there.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.

Canada and Denmark Fought a War Over an Uninhabited Island Using Whisky and Schnapps

 Roughly halfway between Canada and Greenland in the narrow channel called Nares Strait sits a small uninhabited island called Hans Island.


It is approximately 1.3 square kilometers. Nothing lives there permanently. Nothing of obvious economic value is on it.


For roughly 50 years Canada and Denmark disputed ownership of this island. And the way they disputed it became one of the most civilized and genuinely funny territorial conflicts in history.


How It Worked


When the dispute began both countries claimed Hans Island fell within their territorial waters. Neither was willing to simply concede.


So they did what reasonable neighbors do.


When Canadian officials visited the island they would plant a Canadian flag and leave behind a bottle of Canadian whisky with a note welcoming any Danish visitors.


When Danish officials visited they would remove the Canadian flag, plant a Danish flag, and leave behind a bottle of Danish schnapps with a note welcoming any Canadian visitors.


This went on for decades. Officials from both countries made periodic visits to the island, swapped flags, left liquor, and went home. No shots were fired. No diplomatic crisis erupted. The territorial question remained unresolved but nobody was hurt and everybody got a drink.


The conflict was sometimes called the Whisky War in Canadian media.


How It Ended


In June 2022 Canada and Denmark formally resolved the Hans Island dispute by agreeing to divide the island in half along its natural midpoint. Each country got roughly half of an uninhabited frozen rock in the Arctic.


Both governments described the resolution as a model for peaceful international dispute resolution.


They were right. Fifty years of flag swapping and alcohol exchange ended in a negotiated settlement that hurt nobody and produced no permanent damage to the relationship between two countries that have been allies for most of modern history.


What This Story Tells Us


The Hans Island dispute is easy to find funny. Two wealthy stable democracies spending decades arguing over a rock by leaving booze for each other is objectively amusing.


But it is also a genuine example of something important. Most territorial disputes throughout history have been resolved through violence. The Hans Island situation was resolved through patience, low-stakes symbolic gestures, and eventually negotiation.


The flag planting and the whisky were not entirely silly. They were a way of maintaining each country's claim without escalating to anything that could cause real harm. They kept the question open without making it dangerous.


Not every dispute can be handled this way. Not every territorial conflict involves two democracies with no real economic stake in the outcome. But the Hans Island story is a useful reminder that escalation is a choice and that sometimes the right move is to plant a flag, leave a bottle, and come back next year.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.


The Waterloo Teeth Were Real and Battlefield Scavengers Pulled Them From Dead Soldiers

 After the Battle of Waterloo in 1815 roughly 50,000 men lay dead or wounded on a Belgian field.


Before the bodies were buried scavengers moved across the battlefield pulling teeth.


They used pliers and knives to extract the teeth from the mouths of the dead and the dying. They collected them in bags. Then they sold them to dentists and denture makers across Europe.


The demand was real and the supply was enormous.


What the Market Was


Dentures in the early 19th century were made from a variety of materials. Ivory from elephants and hippos was common but expensive and deteriorated over time. Porcelain was used but did not look natural. Wooden teeth were very rare and mostly impractical. Human teeth were considered the best material because they looked real, were durable, and fit naturally in the mouth.


The problem was supply. Pulling teeth from living people caused pain and permanent loss. Paying the poor for their teeth was one source. Pulling teeth from corpses was another.


Battlefields produced large numbers of young healthy men who died quickly from trauma rather than disease. Their teeth were often in good condition. After Waterloo so many teeth were harvested that Waterloo teeth became a recognized category in the dental market. The name stuck even as teeth from other battles and other sources were sold under the same label.


The practice continued through subsequent conflicts. During the American Civil War teeth were pulled from dead soldiers on both sides and shipped to Europe where American Waterloo teeth were sold. The demand did not slow until vulcanite rubber was developed in the 1850s as a practical base for artificial teeth, making mass production of dentures possible and reducing dependence on human sources.


What This Tells Us


The Waterloo teeth story is disturbing in a way that is easy to understand. The image of scavengers working across a battlefield pulling teeth from the fallen is genuinely grim.


But it is also a story about systems. The wealthy of 19th century Europe wanted functional dentures. The available technology required human teeth to make the best ones. Markets form around demand. And markets that form around demand that cannot be met through clean channels find unclean ones instead.


The people doing the extraction were usually desperately poor. The people selling the finished dentures were respectable professionals. The wealthy clients who wore them may or may not have known where the material came from. The system moved the cost of the arrangement onto the battlefield dead and onto the poverty of the people doing the collection work.


That is a dynamic that appears in history over and over under different circumstances. The extraction cost and the moral cost settle on the people with the least power to refuse them. The benefit goes elsewhere.


Robert Lee Beers III is a writer and digital preservation advocate based in North Charleston South Carolina.