Tuesday, May 09, 2006

DIg out those old photos and start writing!

A three book series that you can be a part of!
By David D Dickinson and Americans Everywhere

Written as a three part series, American Wisdom and Memoirs will have a separate book for each generation of Americans:

  • American Wisdom and Memoirs: Seniors Edition
  • American Wisdom and Memoirs: Baby Boomers Edition
  • American Wisdom and Memoirs: Young Americans Edition

Most all of us have boxes or albums full of old family pictures. Take a moment and dig them out. It's amazing how the memories come flooding back to us. Be sure and make some note or write a short story to go with each of those old photos, so that your children and their children don't lose the valuable family history that goes along with them. It's up to each of us to preserve and pass down the stories and the wisdom that each piece of that captured history represents. If you don't know or remember the significance of some of those pictures, now is the time to get together with family and friends to sort through them and recapture that history. Do it now, before it is too late. As each family member passes this life, a piece of your family history goes with them. We each hold life by a thin thread and never know when our time with our loved ones is going to be over. Make it your personal responsibility to document as much of that family history as you can. Sure, you're busy with the chores and events of everyday life. There always seems to be so much to do. But, ask yourself... what could be more important than to pass on the memories and the wisdom that exists in each of our families? Don't let the memories slip by so that the generations that follow can only wonder who the faces in those old pictures are.

In the American Wisdom and Memoirs book series, you can leave those stories and bits of wisdom that has been passed down for not only your family to see, but for all of America to share, as well. Some of the stories will make us laugh and some might make us cry, but in each of us is a story or two that will make others feel something. Each written contribution in these books will be accompanied by an acknoledgement of the individual and if so desired, a picture to to enhance the written entry. If you are writing about a funny story about your grandmother or a bit of wisdom passed down by your old Uncle Frank, include a photo to go along with it. A picture goes a long way in making a story come alive.Below are just a handful of my old family pictures and when I look at each one, the memories come to life, stirring emotions and keeping my old family members fresh in my mind. It is reassuring to know that they will not be forgotten even after I am gone.

My father, Robert Dickinson, and his mother, Nelle "Queenie" Shurtleff Dickinson in 1949.

My mother, Edie, and my step-dad, Ed Wright, on their wedding day... 9/1/1956

My mother made this Choo Choo train cake for my 7th birthday out of angel food cake, complete with animals in the cages.

My brother and I with a family friend at Point Defiance Park in Tacoma, Washington in 1954. My mother always dressed us alike. quite stylish, aren't we?

The proverbial buck naked baby picture. Thanks, Mom!

The website at http://www.americanwisdomandmemoirs.com/ will be up soon and you will able to submit your writings and photos in our easy to use format. If you have any questions, please feel free to E-mail me at dddickinson@AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com.


You probably know someone else that has lots to say and we we welcome you to spread the word. American Wisdom and Memoirs is a grass roots effort and we need your help in getting the word out. For now, get busy and think of what you will contribute to this book series that we are certain will be cherished by Americans all over for many years to come.


David Dickinson

Thursday, April 27, 2006

Topics... Topics... Topics... What should you say?

A three book series that you can be a part of!
By David D Dickinson and Americans Everywhere

There are unlimited ideas when it comes to subjects to write about in the "American Wisdom and Memoirs" book series. The three books will each take a unique look at Americans and each American is unique, so don't feel too limited. Although the books are not a soapbox for political views or religeous zealots, I do want to know what makes you who you are today. What are the experiences, the family values, the mentors, the sucesses and failures that make you the person you are?

Which of these books do you belong in?

  • “American Wisdom and Memoirs: Seniors Edition”
  • “American Wisdom and Memoirs: Baby Boomers Edition”
  • “American Wisdom and Memoirs: Young Americans Edition”

The list below is just a start....

Topics for all generations

  • Guiding principles
  • Mistakes made and lessons learned
  • The one recipe the whole world should know about
  • Favorite saying and what it means to me
  • Stories that will make you laugh?
  • Stories that will make you cry?
  • Best family story
  • Value of Friends and Friendship
  • Value of Family
  • Parenting philosophies
  • Secrets to living a long and healthy life
  • Secrets to a long and happy marriage
  • Thoughts on today's education and health care systems
  • Advice to today's youth
  • Most important event in my life
  • What did you do for a living? How did you come to do that?
  • What makes me happy in my life today?
  • What makes me unhappy in my life today?
  • What are my dreams and goals today?
  • How have they changed over time?
  • What do I believe in the most?
  • "I remember the time..."
  • What single geographical move had the most impact on me and my family? Why? What might I do differently?
  • What regrets do I have in my life? What and how would I change things?
  • How should America approach the rest of the world today?
  • Who was the patriarch or matriarch in your family and what did your family gain from their wisdom?
  • What advice do you have for today?s youth?
  • What are the parenting skills that you believe in? How do they apply to today?s youth and the world they are trying to grow up in?
  • What should our educators be doing differently?
  • What should be done with our health care system?
  • What do I / did I admire the most about my parents or grandparents?
  • Who was my favorite educator? What did they do that made them special?
  • My first experience with a car.

Additional topics for Young Americans

  • How do you see the differences in your generation and the previous three?
  • Are you more tolerant to racial issues?
  • Are you more or less opinionated on gay rights and gender roles that your parents and grandparents?
  • Are you more inclined to adopt or change the policies and social customs of older generations?
  • Do you feel like are you held back in the world of business because the Baby Boomers are still in the workforce and in upper management... Do you feel like you are waiting in line for your future to begin?
  • Did D.A.R.E. have an impact on you?
  • Did you vote in the 2004 election?
  • Will your generation effect change within politics or are you reflective of business as usual?
  • Has AIDS directly or indirectly had an impact on your life?

__________________________________________

How can you contribute?

The website for this project is currently under construction, but I hope that you will go to http://www.AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com/ and bookmark it and return often. As the next couple of weeks go by, you will be able to find out more about the projects and how you will be able to contribute your writings. You have already written something that would be a valuable contribution, haven't you?
Feel free to contact me at dddickinson@AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com

David D Dickinson

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Coming soon... "American Wisdom and Memoirs"

A three book series that you can be a part of!
By David D. Dickinson and Americans Everywhere

Please take a moment to go to www.AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com and bookmark it.

Check back... the site will be operational soon and you will be able to submit your story right on the site to be published in one of three upcoming books. In the American Wisdom and Memoirs book series, you will have a voice in one of these books:

  • “American Wisdom and Memoirs: Seniors Edition”

There have been many events that have shaped America's Senior citizens and it will be part of this book to tell some of those stories, but more importantly, “American Wisdom and Memoirs: Seniors Edition” will be about whom you are today and what you have learned from those events... how you see life today. Please share your wisdom and your stories with America. Don't put it off. Start now! America is eager to learn from you.

  • “American Wisdom and Memoirs: Baby Boomers Edition”

Baby boomers presently make up the lion's share of the political, cultural, industrial and academic leadership class in the United States. Some of your wisdom and knowledge can be expressed by telling a story. Some of you may simply want to write out your opinions on a variety of topics, based on your experience. "American Wisdom and Memoirs: Baby Boomers Edition" will be the place to tell your story for America to read.

  • “American Wisdom and Memoirs: Young Americans Edition”

American Wisdom and Memoirs: Young Americans Edition will the third in a series of books and will cover a very broad range of America’s youngest people. Together; as a large group of young Americans, you have had and will continue to have an enormous impact on our society, in many ways. Now that we are away from the late 80s and early 90s that generated the stereotypes that have tried to define you as a generation, tell us who you are as an individual today.

So, America...

Open your scrap books, your old boxes of pictures, your high school annuals, your boxes of memorabilia and most importantly, your minds. If you had but a few days to tell the world the one or two things that are most important to you or the essential bits of knowledge and wisdom that you would want to leave your children or grandchildren… what would you say? Here is your chance.

After going through the decades that you have to reach this point in your life, each of you have had many experiences, some good and some bad. You have made mistakes and learned lessons. You have had struggles and challenges and you have had victories and successes. You have stories to tell.

Please use this opportunity to speak to everyone who will read these three books being written right now by you and many others... because in the end, it is you that will be the authors. It will be you whose voice will be heard.

In the meantime, if you have questions or comments (we welcome fresh ideas) or want to be put on the "notify" list for advanced copies once the books are in print, please feel free to email me at dddickinson@AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com

How can you contribute?

The website for this project is currently under construction, but I hope that you will go to http://www.AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com/ and bookmark it and return often. As the next couple of weeks go by, you will be able to find out more about the projects and how you will be able to contribute your writings. You have already written something that would be a valuable contribution, haven't you?

David D Dickinson

Sunday, April 23, 2006

Gas sure was cheaper in 1951...

A three book series that you can be a part of!
By David D. Dickinson and Americans everywhere

The site will be online soon and ready to accept your written contributions for the American Wisdom and Memoirs book series. Your generation will have a voice in one of these books:
  • “American Wisdom and Memoirs: Seniors Edition”
  • “American Wisdom and Memoirs: Baby Boomers Edition”
  • “American Wisdom and Memoirs: Young Americans Edition”

For now, check out a little bit of history from the day I was born.
(Wow, gas sure isn’t as cheap as it used to be! )




Tuesday, September 18, 1951 (Yep, I’m a Baby Boomer!)

Top News Headlines This Week:

Sep 19 - 1st broadcast of "Search for Tomorrow" on CBS-TV Sep 19 - Italian civil servants strike for pay increase Sep 20 - 1st North Pole jet crossing Sep 20 - Swiss males votes against female suffrage Sep 20 - NL President Ford Frick elected 3rd commissioner of baseball Sep 21 - Emil Zatopek runs 15,000 m. in record 44 min, 54.6 sec

Top Songs for 1951:
Come On-A My House by Rosemary Clooney
Because of You by Tony Bennett
If by Perry Como
Too Young by Nat King Cole
Cry by Johnnie Ray
Be My Love by Mario Lanza
How High the Moon by Les Paul & Mary Ford
Sin by Eddy Howard
Cold, Cold Heart by Tony Bennett
Mockin' Bird Hill by Les Paul & Mary Ford

In Office:
US President... Harry S. Truman
US Vice President... Alben W. Barkley

Academy Award Winners:
Best Picture: An American In Paris, Produced By Arthur Freed
Best Actor: Humphrey Bogartin The African Queen
Best Actress: Vivien Leigh in A Streetcar Named Desire

1951 Prices:
Bread: $0.16/loaf
Milk: $0.92/gal
Eggs: $0.72/doz
Car: $1,800
Gas: $0.27/gal
House: $16,000
Stamp: $0.03/ea

Avg Income: $4,194/yr
Min Wage: $0.75/hr
DOW Avg: 269

People born on September 18:
1905 - Greta Garbo Stockholm (Ninotchka, Grand Hotel, Camille)
1933 - Robert Blake Nutley NJ, (Baretta, Little Rascals, Coast to Coast)

On TV in 1951:
Amos 'n' Andy
All Star Revue
The Red Skelton Show
Strike it Rich
The Jack Benny Show
The Roy Rogers Show
Gangbusters
Racket Squad
Goodyear TV Playhouse
Dragnet

Hot New Toys in 1951:
Colorforms

Top Books in 1951:
Amos Fortune, Free Man by Elizabeth Yates
The Catcher in the Rye by J. D. Salinger
From Here to Eternity by James Jones

Looking at all of that really takes me back. What was happening on the day you were born?

Take a moment right now and be sure and go to our “Coming Soon” page at http://www.AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com/ and bookmark it, so you can return easily so you can find out:

  • how you can make a written contribution to the book series
  • where you can get this kind of information and a timeline of events in your life

Dig out your old High School annuals, your boxes of pictures and talk to your family about things that happened in your past. Think about what you have been through and then write down the best of your memories, stories, wisdom from your elders and the things that you have learned from your own experiences. What are some of the mistakes you have made and the lessons you have learned? What’s the story you always tell at family get-togethers? American Wisdom and Memoirs is going to be a three book series where you can leave something for all to read. It won’t take long to gather the stories to publish these books… So, start thinking now and come to the site and publish your thoughts, wisdom and memories. We’ll be up and running soon and ready to accept your written contribution.

If you would like to contact me directly, please send your email to dddickinson@AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com

David D Dickinson

Thursday, April 20, 2006

Senior Citizens... You have a lasting voice thanks to this book series! Tell YOUR STORY!

A three book series that you can be a part of!
By Davd D. Dickinson and America's Seniors Everywhere


“American Wisdom and Memoirs:
Seniors Edition”

By David D. Dickinson and America’s Seniors

Today's blog describes the “American Wisdom and Memoirs: Seniors Edition” portion of the book project and serves as an open invitation for Seniors all across America to be a part of it.

(NOTE: If you are not a Senior citizen and are reading this... you may know of a Senior that would have some wonderful stories and some sage advice. Please copy/ print this blog to give to them!!)

I hope that you, as a valuable member of our senior generation, will decide to become a part of this book project. Please, consider this as your opportunity to speak openly and help me make the “American Wisdom and Memoirs: Seniors Edition” project a valuable piece of contemporary American literature. Feel free to call or email if you have questions or ideas.

Younger generations have been bombarded by and influenced greatly by modern technology, ripped away from the core family by rapid means of transportation, and dislocated from traditional values in the need to keep up and to get ahead at any cost and by any means. We have, as a society, changed and your generation is the last link to a more grounded way of life and more cohesive approach to family.

Many of you went through the Great Depression. All of you went through World War II and Korea in some manner. There have been many events that have shaped you and it will be part of this book to tell some of those stories, but more importantly, “American Wisdom and Memoirs: Seniors Edition” will be about whom you are today and what you have learned from those events... how you see life today. This book will be about what you learned from your parents and grandparents and how that applied to your life and whether it is valid and valuable to younger generations. Who was the patriarch or matriarch in your family and what did your family gain from their wisdom? What advice do you have for today’s youth? What are the parenting skills that you believe in? How do they apply to today’s youth and the world they are trying to grow up in? What should our educators be doing differently? What should be done with our health system?

“American Wisdom and Memoirs: Seniors Edition” will focus on you and your stories, philosophies, principals and beliefs. Your generation has much to offer, but your family may not discover written treasures in your attic. You may not have written your memoirs and tucked them away to be read after you have passed. This book will give you and people just like you an outlet to share your thoughts in writing. This will also be an opportunity for all of us to share your insights and knowledge on a variety of topics and questions… and to learn from you. America is thirsty for your knowledge, experience and wisdom. It will be you and people like yourself that will take this from being a project to becoming a book. Please take some time and give us your input.

Each entry in the book will include the contributor’s name, date and place of birth, description (grandmother of four, former CEO, retired educator, former US President) and current residence. It is important to us that each person be acknowledged for the wisdom and insight in their contribution.

Many of you will be able to sit down and write for hours. Some, however, may not have the writing skills to write a narrative or may have trouble getting your ideas together and on paper, yet you do have a story to tell. Your stories do need to be told and we can make arrangements for a personal interview at your request. Please call or email us to make those arrangements. We will be waiting to hear from you and eager to talk to you.

As soon as the website at www.AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com is complete, you will be able to make your written contribution right online.

If sent in by US Postal mail, your submission will require a written release form allowing publication of your commentary and memoirs. Please contact me and I will get one to you. (There will be a realease form on the website soon.)

If you are bursting at the seams to tell your story, I suggest you start right away and get your thoughts and ideas down on paper or in a voice recording.

We would prefer that you send your submission through our website at www.AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com as it becomes available to the public, however, written or electronically recorded entries can be made and sent to us in a variety of ways, including:




  • Written letters and photos sent via postal mail, UPS, FedEx, etc.
  • Documents on a CD via postal mail, UPS, FedEx, etc.
  • Written and sent via e-mail to dddickinson@americanwisdomandmemoirs.com
  • Recorded and sent on tape via postal mail, UPS, FedEx, etc.
  • Personal interview, in person or by phone, with notes compiled into a narrative

Please send your hand written or typed entries to:

American Wisdom and Memoirs
2400 NW 80th St
Box #154
Seattle, WA 98117-4449


If you have questions, suggestions, comments or need to arrange a personal interview, please call David Dickinson at 206-354-8347 or Email to: dddickinson@americanwisdomandmemoirs.com

We look forward to hearing from you. You do have something to say, don't you??

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

Baby Boomers... You have a voice in American Wisdom and Memoirs

A three book series that you can be a part of!

By David D Dickinson and Americans Everywhere

I hope that you, as a valuable member of the Baby Boomer generation, will decide to become a part of this book project. In the very near future, I will be asking for written contributions through the website at www.AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com. Please consider this as your opportunity to speak openly and help take this from book project to a valuable piece of contemporary American literature.

In American Wisdom and Memoirs: Baby Boomer Edition, I would like as many of the Baby Boomers as possible, those people born between 1946 – 1964, across the country to participate. The idea behind this book will be to tell the stories you would like to pass on, to impart the wisdom that you have gained. Some of your wisdom and knowledge can be expressed by telling a story. Some of you may simply want to write out your opinions on a variety of topics, based on your experiences.
There will be a topics page on the American Wisdom and Memoirs website that will help to give you some ideas. Do not feel limited to that list. Open your minds and hearts and give what you have to give, because in the end, that is what this book is about… passing on what you have to offer to anyone that is willing to read. This is your opportunity to tell the world what you think and feel. Your entry will be your memoir to be passed on in print.
After going through the decades that you have to reach this point in your life, you have had many experiences, some good and some bad. You have made mistakes and learned lessons. You have had struggles and challenges and you have had victories and successes. You have stories to tell. Some of you have achieved great financial wealth. Some of you have gone bankrupt. Some of you have done both. Many of you have been married and divorced several times and some have mixed families with the challenges that come with this new lifestyle born of our modern society.
Baby boomers presently make up the lion's share of the political, cultural, industrial and academic leadership class in the United States. Presidents Bill Clinton and George Bush are both Baby Boomers. They were born in the same year and their differing approaches and opinions, as presidents, are only one example of the diverse values and attitudes that represent America’s largest generation.
From the heartland of America to its vast shores and borders, your generation, the Baby Boomers, have a wisdom that is unique to the American experience. It is made up of the values, beliefs and principles passed down from previous generations, many of which came to America in search of a better life for themselves and their families, and through your own life’s experiences.
Open your scrap books, your old boxes of pictures, your high school annuals, your boxes of memorabilia and most importantly, your minds. If you had but a few days to tell the world the one or two things that are most important to you or the essential bits of knowledge and wisdom that you would want to leave your children or grandchildren… what would you say? Here is your chance.
So, to Baby Boomers everywhere, I invite you to begin the journey of having your words of wisdom, your individual stories set in print through "American Wisdom and Memoirs: Baby Boomers Edition." The web site near completion and you will be able to submit your thoughts and stories right online.
For now, please go to http://www.AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com/ and bookmark the page so that you can return and find out more. If you know of someone else that should tell their story and share their wisdom, please let them know.In the meantime, if you have questions or comments (we welcome fresh ideas), please feel free to email me at dddickinson@AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com.

I look forward to hearing from you. Please take a moment to read my first post, entitled "Contribute to American Wisdom and Memoirs." This will tell you more about the project and why I am asking you to contribute.

David D. Dickinson

Tuesday, April 18, 2006

Young Americans... Get your story published in this book!

A series of three books that you can be a part of!
By David D. Dickinson and Young Americans everywhere

“American Wisdom and Memoirs: Young Americans Edition”

By David D. Dickinson and Young Americans Everywhere


American Wisdom and Memoirs: Young Americans Edition will the third in a series of books and will cover a very broad range of America’s youngest people. The years determining the scope of Generations X and Y are up for debate, but for the purposes of this book project, we will be asking Young Americans born immediately after the Baby Boomers, between 1965 and 1981 to consider themselves Gen Xers. Those of you born between 1982 and the end of the 20th century would be considered Generation Y. Therefore, some of you may be as much as thirty five years of age and may be the parents of others in the Young Americans edition of this book series. Together; as a large group of young Americans, you have had and will continue to have an enormous impact on our society, in many ways.

Gen Xers have been associated with flannel shirts and grunge music. Often, you have been described as overeducated, underachieving “slackers” who wanted to not be a part of status and social climbing. Other stereotypes have GenXers drinking franchise store coffee and working menial jobs. As is the case with any generation, there is no single description for your entire generation and in the end, each person is an individual with opinions, thoughts and experiences that are unique. We cannot take one group of people and paint them all with the same brush. So, in American Wisdom and Memoirs: Young Americans Edition, we will ask that you take this opportunity to set yourself apart from your peers and speak as an individual. Tell us what makes you who you are. Now that we are away from the late 80s and early 90s that generated the stereotypes that have tried to define you as a generation, tell us who you are today.

How do you feel about the world we live in? How are your perceptions different than those of you parents and educators? What did you learn from your Baby Boomer parents and your grandparents from the era of World War II and how does any of it apply to you today? Do their values work for you or are things so different in today’s world that those values are outdated and inappropriate? As you mature, will your generation have a lower divorce rate than the previous generation? Do you place more value on family? Did anything you learned in school have anything to do with what you need to know today? What do you see for the future for both yourself and your generation? Just because you can accomplish something, should you? Is anything possible if you throw enough money at it? What are your priorities? How are you different from the Generation Y people that we have merged you together with as Young Americans? Is your generation really that different? American Wisdom and Memoirs: Young Americans Edition asks you to ask yourselves these and other tough questions and to tell the world what you think.

Please use this opportunity to speak to everyone who will read this book being written right now by you and many others, because in the end, it is you that will be the authors. It will be you whose voice will be heard.

Generation Y, the Net Generation, Millenials or Echo Boomers, as you are sometimes referred to, follows Generation X and you are the last group of Young Americans born in the 20th century. So, your generation ranges in age from young children to your early and even mid twenties. As there is always debate over when a generation begins, some feel that Generation Y includes people born as early as 1976 and others draw the line at 1982, as stated above. There simply was not a single event, such as the end of World War II, which defines the beginning of the Baby Boomers, to mark the beginning of Generation Y. This book series does not try to define your generation by a term you may choose not to associate with, but rather uses a term of reference commonly understood by most. However you draw the line and by whatever term you use to define your generation, we invite you to be a part of American Wisdom and Memoirs: Young Americans Edition.

Events often define generations and most Young Americans in your generation can remember The Challenger explosion, the fall of the Soviet Union and the first Gulf War. Most of your generation was there to see the widespread use of personal computers and the internet and today, use it for personal communication and socializing more than previous generations. The youngest of you were well aware of 9/11 and the second Gulf War and the War on Terror will probably define the end of your generation just as the Second World War defined the beginning of the Baby Boomers. You are the children of the Boomers and the younger cousins or siblings of Gen Xers.

So, to Young Americans everywhere, we invite you to begin the journey of having your words of wisdom, your individual stories set in print through American Wisdom and Memoirs: Young Americans Edition. The web site near completion and you will be able to submit your thoughts and stories right online. For now, please go to http://www.AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com/ and bookmark the page so that you can return and find out more. If you know of someone else that should tell their story and share their wisdom, please let them know.

In the meantime, if you have questions or comments (we welcome fresh ideas), please feel free to email me at dddickinson@AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com

Friday, April 14, 2006

Contribute to American Wisdom and Memoirs

"American Wisdom and Memoirs "
A series of three books that you can be a part of
By David D Dickinson and Americans everywhere!

Written as a three part series, American Wisdom and Memoirs will have a separate book for each generation of Americans:

  • American Wisdom and Memoirs: Seniors Edition
  • American Wisdom and Memoirs: Baby Boomers Edition
  • American Wisdom and Memoirs: Young Americans Edition


Please take a moment to read further and discover what these book projects are about and I hope you will decide to be a part of what may become a valuable piece of American literature.

_______________________________________

What is Wisdom?

Wisdom can be defined as the ability to make correct judgments and decisions and to exercise common sense. It is an intangible quality gained through experience and it gives us our individual perspective. We can gain wisdom by reading studying and obtaining an education or simply by paying attention to what is happening around us as we go about our daily lives and by learning from those around us. From the time we are born, until the time we die, we are gaining insight and understanding. We learn from our family and our teachers, our clergy and our leaders. Major events in our lives, such as the experience of war, the birth of a child, or a near death experience give us insight that is invaluable to the rest of our lives. The more we experience, the wiser we become.

Some people around us seem to have more wisdom than others. From those people, we gain inspiration and insight. We draw upon their wisdom. It might be a parent or grandparent, a teacher, minister, commanding officer or simply the guy down the street that we looked up to growing up. Sometimes, that innate wisdom that our mentors in life show us is not always the result of a broad education or world travels. Often, it is hard to pinpoint what it is and why this person seems to have such excellent judgment, but it is there for us to draw on, none the less. Neither of my parents had college degrees, but I still look back on their lives and the insight and understanding they displayed with admiration.

From the heartland of America to its vast shores and borders, many Americans have wisdom unique to our culture and our American experience. It is made up of the values and beliefs passed down from our ancestors, those new Americans that came to this great land in search of a better life for themselves and their families.

American Wisdom and Memoirs will seek to draw from the wisdom of Americans everywhere.

______________________________________

What is a Memoir?

Many memoirs have been written by or for famous Americans and published to be shared as a chronicle of their lives, so that a part of our American history should not be lost. That is important and those memoirs have given us insight into those historical lives and the wisdom that those people had to share, but we all have a story to tell. We all have wisdom that we have gained through our lives. This book series will provide an opportunity for all Americans to have a voice and to tell their story and impart their wisdom, because we all have values and beliefs that are a part of us and that we draw on to make decisions in our daily lives.

People from all walks of life, all over this great country, have a story to tell. Who might be good contributors to American WIsdom and Memoirs book series? The answer is simple. Celebrities, politicians, authors, teachers, counselors, parents, grandparents, college students, military people, laborers, immigrants… all have something to say.

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Why this book project?


The birth of this book series came in the middle of the night in January, 2006. At one o’clock on a Saturday night, moving into Sunday, our two small dogs began an outburst of barking as my eighteen year old son returned from Winter Ball. I got up and said “Hello,” asking how the dance was, as my mother often did when I was my son’s age. Going back to bed, I found myself unable to go back to sleep and my mind was going a hundred miles an hour. We have all had that experience. I thought of him and his older brothers and sisters, questioning if I had done all that I could to convey to them the insights, knowledge and wisdom that I had to offer them, so that they could go out and make their way in the outside world. I had, for the last ten years since she had passed away, wished that I could consult my mother. I had always thought her a very wise and gracious woman with tremendous insight. In my mind, she always seemed to know what to say or do.

My mind continued to wander, thinking of my grandparents, aunts, uncles and old family friends who had also passed. I was sad to realize that all I had were vague memories. It was hard to even remember their voices. I wished that I could go back and take some time out of my busy life to make a record of their thoughts and perceptions of life. So much had been lost by not having their memoirs.

As I continued to toss and turn, unable to calm my mind, I began to think of all the millions of people in America, each with a story to tell. I thought of the senior citizens that were still with us and had stories to pass on. Was anyone taking notes? Would anyone remember their stories and be able to pass down their wisdom?

The generation that spawned the baby boomers came from an era when there was more time to pass those stories and progress seems to have eaten away the moments that families spend together, retelling those stories. Family values seem to have changed with the times. Families have become more fragmented with the divorce rate at all time highs and the world becoming a smaller place due to modern communications and the ability to travel long distances quickly. The world is on the go and we seem to be moving away from family being the center of our day to day lives. The internet and cable TV bombard us with information and new ways to do things.

There isn't much time spent around the family dinner table talking about events and how they relate to us as family. Grandparents don’t see as much of their grandchildren as they did fifty or one hundred years ago. Grandchildren know less and less of what their grandparents are about and the values that the older generations grew up with. Is that the progress that we have made as a society or is it the consequence of that progress?

I realized that I had trunks and boxes of pictures dating back to the late 1800s and not enough written history to know what the people in the pictures were really all about. The voices had been stilled. The pictures could only tell so much of the story. I realized that I had failed. I had failed because I did not take the time to ask the generation that is now gone to pass on those stories that they knew and to record their memoirs when there had been time. It is too late now. They are gone.

But, it is not only our senior citizens that have something to say. Baby Boomers and the young Americans that are setting a new pace for this great country need a place to raise their voices and tell their stories, as well, and so American Wisdom and Memoirs will have an American Wisdom and Memoirs: Baby Boomers Edition and an American Wisdom and Memoirs: Young Americans Edition, in addition to American Wisdom and Memoirs: Seniors Edition.

Everyone has experiences, principles, wisdom passed down from family and mentors. Everyone has a story to tell, but this is not my book and it not my story. This book will be written by those that contribute.

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How can you contribute?


The website for this project is currently under construction, but I hope that you will go to www.AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com and bookmark it and return often. As the next couple of weeks go by, you will be able to find out more about the projects and how you will be able to contribute your writings. You have already written something that would be a valuable contribution, haven't you?

Feel free to contact me at dddickinson@AmericanWisdomAndMemoirs.com

David D Dickinson