Sue Kreikemeier is president of the Whitman County Genealogical Society. Her editorial in their November 2025 newsletter was a real zinger and I asked permission from her to share it with you.
"Dear Readers, I am sure many of you can related to the quandary I find myself facing on a continual basis... how to manage my plethora of notes, hard copy records, unlabeled family photos and other ephemera from my genealogical pursuits. How do I know what to keep and what to toss out? Might something seeming irrelevant become an important clue in the future?
"Asking myself what is a "keeper," I went to Google and found many definitions. My favorites were (1)a person whose job it is to guard to take care of something or (2) a curator. This gave me a new way of looking at those challenging piles and files. Instead of thinking about which items I should keep, I started thinking about how I might better define and deliver on my role of "keeper" especially as it relates to family history."
Sue went on in this editorial to tell about how she and her siblings were collaborating on putting down their memories of a very frightening event that occurred in the family when Sue was about nine years old. Sue says she has realized that "sometimes being a "keeper" means sharing something that can't be found in any document or archive."
Isn't that just another way to say WRITE YOUR STORIES NOW! I think Sue would second that motion.
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