/ Blog / Cancer & Caregiving

Leave a Digital Legacy: Keep a Video Diary to Share Your Wisdom

A few months ago, my dear friend Susan told me about her mother’s health problems.

Susan’s mother, facing late-stage cancer, chose to stop treatment and transition to palliative care. At her mother’s request, Susan’s family wanted to assist their matriarch with preserving her legacy.

They want to make the most of their remaining time together, solidifying sweet memories and forging new ones.

After a recent encounter with my friend, I had an idea to assist her family with preserving her mom’s legacy.

I told Susan about my family’s love for our old home videos, and how they serve as a sort of live-action memory for us. I also told her she might use a video diary to record her mother’s childhood stories, fondest family memories, desires for her loved ones, and loving words of wisdom.

I lost my father to mesothelioma. Creating a video diary for someone battling an aggressive cancer is an excellent way to preserve their legacy and cherish their thoughts for years to come.

Legacy Work and Video Biographies

Lots of people choose to document their experiences with dealing with a diagnosis, undergoing treatment and leaning on their loved ones to cope.

Some decide to write blogs, craft keepsakes, create scrapbooks or record a video diary chronicling their experiences. Some seek assistance from professionals while others opt for a more private approach.

Creating a legacy is as individualized a process as the people whose memories we preserve.

Through our research, Susan and I realized some families choose to call in professionals to help with legacy work and creating video biographies. Mental health clinicians and professional videographers can assist cancer patients with determining what sort of narrative to create, understanding the interview process and video creation.

Susan’s family opted for a more private approach to creating her mother’s legacy.

Ideas People Might Include in a Video Diary

Organizations such as Living Wisely make documenting a life story a profession.

Their website offers features that assist folks in expressing their personal values, loving sentiments and thoughts of gratitude. Within a life story or narrative, people can share their history, feelings for their loved ones and words of strength.

Because Susan’s family chose a more private approach, she just simply asked her mom what kinds of things she’d like to include in her legacy video.

They decided to focus on things that mattered most to her mom such as her childhood, family history, major life events, and words of wisdom for loved ones and the younger generation.

Elements and Timeframe of a Legacy Video

Because Susan’s mom is in the later stages of her cancer journey, time was an important factor.

Susan mapped out five “interviews” — each lasting an hour — over a two-week time period.

We simply recorded their conversations as if the camera wasn’t there. Soon after the camera started rolling, they talked and laughed like they always do.

Susan constructed the recorded interviews like this:

Whatever the modality, creating a legacy serves as a means of holding on to those you love.

A video diary is a cinematic sentiment that people can leave with their loved ones and future generations of family members.

Within a video diary, families can share their most precious memories and most profound sentiments.

Sometimes I watch my family’s old home videos. Within the reels, I can hear my father laughing, see him smiling, and listen to the calming sound of his voice.

While I treasure the memories, a video diary presents an opportunity to more adequately address tender moments within the life of a loved one.

Article Sources

  1. Living Wisely. (2018). Living Wisely. Retrieved from https://www.livingwisely.org/
  2. Legacy Media Group. (2018). Forever Studios. Retrieved from https://foreverstudios.com/
  3. Sadler-Gerhardt, C.J. & Hollenbach, J.G. (2011). Legacy work: Helping clients with life-threatening illness to preserve memories, beliefs, and values for loved ones. Retrieved from https://www.counseling.org/resources/library/VISTAS/2011-V-Online/Article_95.pdf