Your Photos Are Part of Your Legacy – But Is Your Family Prepared?

Guest post by Teresa Cox: Simple ways to organize, preserve, and share your family’s memories – now and for the next generation

When most people think about leaving a legacy, they focus on financial assets – investments, property, estate plans.
But in my experience, families often aren’t prepared to pass on the most meaningful
assets: the photos, the stories, the family traditions, and the moments that capture a life
over time.
Today, photos are everywhere – on phones, computers, external drives, and across
multiple websites or cloud services. At the same time, many families have decades of older
memories – photo albums, printed photos, slides, and home videos – tucked away in closets
or attics, slowly deteriorating or becoming harder to access.
There’s rarely a single place where everything lives. And often, no one else knows how to
access it – or has a clear plan for how those memories will be organized, preserved, and
shared.

Most of the families I work with aren’t in crisis.

They’re simply at a stage of life where they’re starting to think more intentionally about the future – especially parents who have spent years documenting their children’s lives and want to make sure those memories are organized, protected, and easily shareable with the next generation.

3 Simple Ways to Begin Preserving Your Family’s Memories

1. Bring Your Photos Together

Over time, photos tend to get scattered across devices, platforms, and accounts.

It’s very common to have photos on your phone, older computers or hard drives, in cloud services like iCloud or Google Photos, and in printed albums or storage boxes.

Rather than leaving everything spread out, begin thinking about how to gradually bring your photos together into fewer, more centralized locations.

If your printed photos and older media are stored in multiple places around your home, consider consolidating them into one general area.

Labeling boxes can also be incredibly helpful – especially with timeframes like years or decades, if known. Even simple labels make it much easier to navigate your collection.

If you happen to know family connections for older or heritage photos – like which side of the family they came from or who is pictured – that information can be incredibly meaningful to future generations. It doesn’t have to be perfect – just capturing what you know is often more than enough.

2. Make Your Photos Accessible

Once your photos are more centralized, the next step is making sure they can be accessed when needed.

For digital photos, this may involve sharing passwords or using built-in legacy settings for your online accounts.

If you use an iPhone, Apple offers a Legacy Contact feature.
If you use Google services (Android), there’s a similar tool called Inactive Account Manager.

Accessibility also means that someone else could step in and understand what you have. Even simple organization and clear labeling can make a big difference.

Most people don’t realize how difficult it can be for someone else to piece all of this together without guidance – but a little bit of planning now can make things much easier later.

3. Share and Preserve What Matters Most

Once your photos are more organized and accessible, the next step is to begin sharing them intentionally.

This doesn’t have to be complicated or time-consuming. In fact, some of the most meaningful moments come from simply pulling out old photos or home videos and enjoying them with your children or grandchildren.

Many families have older memories – slides, printed photos, and home movies – that haven’t been viewed in years. Digitizing these items not only preserves them, but makes it possible to easily watch, share, and enjoy them again.

There’s something incredibly special about seeing old family videos come to life – hearing voices, watching personalities, and experiencing moments that might otherwise be forgotten.

You might also consider creating something simple but meaningful, like a small photo book that tells the story of your life or your family. It doesn’t require hundreds of photos – just a thoughtful collection that captures the moments and people who matter most.

The goal isn’t perfection. It’s making sure your memories can be experienced, shared, and enjoyed – both now and for years to come.

If this is something you’ve been meaning to get to “someday,” consider this your gentle nudge to take a small first step – whether that’s gathering your photos into one place, labeling a few boxes, or sharing a favorite memory with your family.

Many people don’t realize there are professionals who specialize in organizing and preserving photo collections – this is the kind of work I help families with every day. 

If you’d like guidance or support along the way – even just a starting point – I’m always happy to help.

Teresa Cox
Photo Concierge Services

photoconciergeservices.com

Episode 70: Saying Yes to the Right Invitations with Colin Stroud


ON ADVENTURE PODCAST  |  EPISODE 70

Episode 70: Saying Yes to the Right Invitations with Colin Stroud

                              

Episode Description

What if your next great adventure is not a destination at all, but a willingness to say yes to the breadcrumbs life keeps dropping in front of you?

Colin Stroud is a 26-year-old credit card rewards consultant, founder of Go Somewhere, and one of the fastest growing voices on LinkedIn in the points and miles space. He grew up in Fort Wayne, Indiana, the son of an OB/GYN and a nurse midwife who met delivering a baby together, and he was on track for a more traditional path until a six-week Spanish immersion trip to Oviedo at 16 cracked the world wide open. From there it was Italy on a $380 flight, a Catholic mission to Poland, an unlikely run at Ave Maria University in south Florida, an early marriage and a baby on the way before he had even graduated, and a first job in life insurance case design that he knew almost immediately was not it.

What followed is a story about paying attention. A coworker mentioned the Chase Trifecta. A LinkedIn post about points went viral and got picked up by The Washington Post. A side hustle turned into consulting calls, then into a community for business owners, then into a full-time business helping families and entrepreneurs unlock travel they thought they could not afford.

We talk about why early travel rewires you, what it actually takes to leave a steady paycheck, the difference between dopamine and meaning, why family life and entrepreneurship feel like the truest adventures of his life right now, and the surprising decision he and his wife made after almost moving to Hawaii. Colin makes a strong case that the go somewhere life is not always about getting on a plane, and that learning to be rooted where your feet are can be its own kind of expedition.

 

Episode Highlights

00:00  From cheap flights as a teenager to a full-time business helping people unlock travel

06:00  World Youth Day in Poland, six weeks of Spanish immersion in Oviedo, and catching the travel bug

14:00  Marriage, a baby on the way, and a first job in life insurance that did not fit

18:00  Discovering the Chase Trifecta and stepping into the points world

23:00  The first viral LinkedIn post and a Washington Post quote that changed everything

25:00  Quitting in November 2024 and going full-time on Go Somewhere

30:00  Almost moving to Hawaii, pumping the brakes, and rethinking what travel does for young kids

34:00  Why family life and entrepreneurship are the truest adventures of his life right now

39:00  Measuring yourself: finally finding feedback after years of feeling stuck

47:00  The two ingredients behind a viable internet business: clear writing and consistent humility

55:00 What adventure means now and where to find Colin online

 

Connect with Colin Stroud

LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/colinstroud

Website: gosomewhere.world

Newsletter: The Go Somewhere Newsletter at gosomewhere.world

Email:

 

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