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Which stack is it in? Which box? Which
file? Where oh where are those papers when I need them? Paper organization
had always been my nemesis, and family history papers have been
the worst. I have tons of papers, pictures, and memorabilia for
my own life history, my husband's life history, and those of our
seven children — and now grandchildren!
In addition, Doug and I are gathering
everything we can find on each of his four grandparents' lines and
my four. As if that weren't enough, my parents bequeathed me two
large boxes of family history papers. How could I keep them straight?
How could I organize things so I could put my hand on the paper
I needed when I needed it and not be forever looking for something?
The LDS commercial theme: “Isn't It
About TIME?” applies here. “Time” is the best reason I could find
to get organized. It takes a little time at first, but saves megabytes
of time in the long run — and who has any to waste in this busy
world? If I could have used all the time I've wasted looking for
papers in the past few years to actually move ahead with my family
history work, I'd have an awfully lot more done!
Organizing Is a Process, Not an
Event
Over the years I've found some answers
that are making my paper life easier and helping me use more and
more of my time productively. I've also learned some principles
that set my mind at ease. The first is that I will always be in
the process of organizing. It is not something that is
ever finished, so it's okay that I'm not through!
The Gathering
The second principle is the importance
of getting started — and that “gathering” is the place to start.
You can't organize what you don't have gathered together in one
place. In his article “Your Family History: Getting Started,” Elder
Boyd K. Packer wrote:
It is a matter
of getting started. You may come to know the principle that Nephi
knew when he said, “And I was led by the Spirit, not knowing beforehand
the things which I should do” (1 Ne. 4:6).
If you don’t
know where to start, start with yourself. If you don’t know what
records to get, and how to get them, start with what you have.
There are two
very simple instructions for those who are waiting for a place
to begin. Here’s what you might do:
Get a cardboard
box. Any kind of a box will do. Put it someplace where it is in
the way, perhaps on the couch or on the counter in the kitchen
— anywhere where it cannot go unnoticed.
Then, over a
period of a few weeks, collect and put into the box every record
of your life, such as your birth certificate, your certificate
of blessing, your certificate of baptism, your certificate of
ordination, and your certificate of graduation. Collect diplomas,
all of the photographs, honors, or awards, a diary if you have
kept one, everything that you can find pertaining to your life;
anything that is written, or registered, or recorded that testifies
that you are alive and what you have done.
Don’t try to
do this in a day. Take some time on it. Most of us have these
things scattered around here and there. Some of them are in a
box in the garage under that stack of newspapers; others are stored
away in drawers, or in the attic, or one place or another. Perhaps
some have been tucked in the leaves of the Bible or elsewhere.
Gather all these
papers together and put them in the box. Keep it there until you
have collected everything you think you have. Then make some space
on a table, or even on the floor, and sort out all that you have
collected. Divide your life into three periods. The Church does
it that way. All of our programming in the Church is divided into
three general categories — childhood, youth, and adult.
Start with the
childhood section and begin with your birth certificate. Put together
every record in chronological order: the pictures, the record
of your baptism, and so on, up to the time you were 12 years of
age.
Next assemble
all that which pertains to your youth, from 12 to 18, or up until
the time you were married. Put all of that together in chronological
order. Line up the records — the certificates, the photographs,
and so on — and put them in another box or envelope. Do the same
with the records on the rest of your life.
Once you have
done this, you have what is necessary to complete your life story.
Simply take your birth certificate and begin writing: “I was born
September 10, 1924, the son of Ira W. Packer and Emma Jensen Packer,
at Brigham City, Utah. I was the tenth child and the fifth son
in the family.”
It really won’t
take you long to write, or dictate into a tape recorder, the account
of your life, and it will have an accuracy because you have collected
those records.
What then? After
you’ve made the outline of your life history to date, what do
you do with all of the materials you have collected?
That, of course,
brings you to your book of remembrance. Simply paste them lightly
on the pages so that they can be taken out if necessary from time
to time, and you have your book of remembrance (Ensign, August
2003, p.12).
I highly recommend
this entire Ensign article.
The Most Unlikely Places
For all those perfectionists out there
― you don't need to wait until you are sure you have absolutely
everything gathered to start the next step. Finding what you have
that pertains to family history and gathering it together in one
place is another process that goes on and on.
Every time I clean out a drawer, box,
closet, or file, I find something that doesn't belong there ―
that needs to be “gathered together” with like papers or objects.
I suppose that is one of the first rules of organization — to get
similar things together.
My sister and I laughed and laughed
when we found, at the bottom of one of Mom and Dad's genealogy boxes,
a tool to loosen the lug bolts when you have a flat tire. We'll
never know what it was doing there — but we certainly didn't need
it for our family history work! Similarly, we often have family
history things where they don't belong. If I have old pictures tucked
in the bottom of a jewelry box, or important certificates in the
bottom of the sock drawer, those things need to be “gathered” to
a central location — a box, a file, a folder in a scrapbook.
I now save myself a lot of time by
having specific places to put the family history stuff I find instead
of just throwing it all into one big box and having to deal with
it later. Here are the best tips I've been able to apply:
- Have a hanging file and picture
history book for each child so when I find something of theirs
I can plop it right into their slot or book.
- Assign a different color to each
ancestor line, purchase those colors of file folders along with
colored stick-on dots and colored markers so I can color code
everything that belongs in each line. I have hanging files for
each of my four lines, and different color folders for each.
For instance, my grandma Laurena's
folders are purple. In that section (the Nielsen line) I have
a purple folder for life stories, a purple folder for pictures,
a purple folder for pedigree charts, a purple folder for family
group sheets and research for any family on this line I may
be researching, a purple folder for certificates and immigration
papers, etc. So now, when I find a paper, I can look on the
pedigree chart, and if it fits into this line, I have a specific
place to put it. I keep any papers I remove from the file in
a purple folder so I know where they go when I return them.
Now, wonder of wonders, when I'm
looking for something I need from that line, I very well might
know exactly where to find it. (The total miracle of that can
only be appreciated by those who have, like me, had to search
through “matter unorganized” for lengthy periods of time!)
The Value of Timelines
Timelines are a surprisingly helpful
organization tool. For instance, if I have a timeline to refer to,
sorting pictures is relatively easy. My personal timeline lists
major life events and the years they occurred: birth, baptism, moves,
marriage, my children's births, and so on. For the years my children
were in school I listed what grade and age each child was each year.
Why? Because I was forever having to figure that out. I also have
a picture timeline for those years — I took their school pictures
and pasted them in chronological sequence for our family book. Now
I can refer to the timeline and the “age progression” pictures when
I'm trying to figure out how old someone was in a certain picture.
I have page protector “envelopes” dated
for each year of each child's life in their separate picture history
books, so when I have the year pinpointed, I know just where to
put the picture. These gathered pictures are the basis for the scrapbooking
I am doing a little at a time.
Timelines can also be helpful in family
history research. Creating a timeline for an ancestor (birth, baptism,
marriage, birth of children, death) quickly shows you which dates
you have and which you are missing and need to research.
The Checklist Approach to Organization
Lloya Hall, a remarkable ward family
history consultant who lives in Orem, headed up a ward committee
that came up with “how-to checklists” for each major aspect of family
history. Her checklists for “getting organized” have been the most
help of anything I've found. The material she shared with me is
not copyrighted, and she has given me permission to spread it around.
Lloya and her amazing committee prepared
a checklist of the various things you need to organize, a checklist
of supplies you need to purchase or gather for most efficient organizing,
a checklist for putting together a family history binder, a checklist
for putting together your file folders, a checklist for putting
together your file box, and so on. (And that is only the section
on organization! She has similar checklists for several other important
aspects of family history.) Anyone interested in receiving this
material by e-mail in PDF format can e-mail a request to me at:
darla2@xmission.com
(Be aware that this is a large document
and might take some time to download. If you want only the organization
section, please specify.)
A Promise from
Elder Packer
There are blessings
that attend any aspect of family history work, but they can't come
if we don't get started. Gathering and organizing what you already
have in your home is a very good place to start.
The Lord is the
great organizer. Organization played a big part in His creative
efforts. Surely He will help us as we attempt to become more like
Him in our organization efforts.
Elder Packer said,
“Once you begin this project, very interesting and inspiring things
will happen. You cannot do this much without getting something of
the spirit of it, and without talking about it, at least in your
family circle. Some very interesting things will start to happen
once you show some interest in your own family history work. It
is a firm principle. There are many, many testimonies about it.
It will happen to you" (Ensign, August 2003, p.12).
© 2006
Meridian Magazine.
All Rights Reserved
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