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From Founder Stephanie Kadel Taras, Ph.D.
My Grandma Kadel had a story to tell.
Raised outside Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and educated as a nurse, she
married a boy she’d met at church camp
who was studying to be a minister. He planned to be a small-town preacher,
and she planned to be a small-town preacher’s wife. But World War
II intervened, sending them to Florida, where my grandpa became a highly
respected army chaplain and part-time minister at a large Tampa church.
Over the years, his reputation grew, and my grandmother’s responsibilities
grew along with it. Before she knew it, she was the wife of a college president,
with faculty and students to care for, as well as her own four children.
It wasn’t the life she had planned, but whose life ever is?
I didn’t know many of these details of my grandmother’s life
when I asked her to let me interview her, on tape, in 1997. She was eighty-three,
and she protested, “I don’t know that I have anything to tell
you.” But with gentle persuasion, I got her talking. We spent three
days together, sitting quietly in her living room, as she reminisced about
childhood days, her parents’ relationship, her caregiving roles, her
husband’s death, her life of faith.
I had been trained as an interviewer
while earning my doctoral degree at Syracuse University, and I knew how
to put people at ease and draw out their memories and stories. I was also
working as a professional writer when I began this project, so I had the
skills to complete my grandmother’s
life story as a book that the whole family could appreciate. And they
did. My grandmother relished the attention she received from children and
grandchildren as they read her story and then talked with her about it.
That’s
when I realized that other families could benefit from the same process.
I started TimePieces Personal Biographies in 2000 so that I could offer
my services to other people who want to tell, record, and share their
life stories. Every project reminds me of the value of my mission. Whether
I’m
helping to tell the life story of a seventy-five-year-old artist, the
reflections of a retired high school teacher, or the memories of a young
mother whose daughter died unexpectedly, I am continually moved by the
power of stories to heal, honor, communicate, and bind us together.
My Grandma Kadel died in March 2004, just a few weeks shy of her 90th
birthday. The book I'd written years before turned up in the hands of my
relatives at the viewing and the memorial service. We used it to reminisce
about her life, and the officiating minister used it to prepare his remarks.
Since then, my aunts have asked for additional copies to give to their
grandchildren, so the next generation will always remember their Great-Grandma.
Life
stories have a long life of their own. I look forward to talking with
you about the stories you would like to preserve.

Biographer
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