One of the fastest ways to stall the memoir process is this idea that you need to start at the beginning.
Childhood. Family history. The full arc of your life, laid out in order.
It sounds logical. It also creates immense pressure.
What shapes us in life isn’t experienced in a clean, linear progression. It’s remembered in moments. Scenes that carry weight long after they’ve passed.
When you try to start with everything, it’s too much to hold. That’s where overwhelm sets in.
So instead of asking, Where do I begin?
Ask: What moment can I enter calmly? Where am I feeling called to explore?
You don’t need your whole story. You need a single moment.
Think small. Ten minutes. One interaction. A specific place.
What’s…
Here’s what that can look like:
A boy sits at a diner counter, his sneakers hooked around the chrome rung of the stool, the loose lace dragging every time his foot swings. The seat is cracked red vinyl, sticking slightly to the back of his legs. He spins once, then stops when the waitress gives him a stern look.
The bell on the door rings. Not her.
He presses his palms into the counter and leans forward, watching the cook scrape something off the grill. Grease pops. A man two seats down stops eating his soup and sandwich combo long enough to cough into a napkin.
3:10, the chromed silver wall clock reads. He takes another long sip of his chocolate milkshake and sighs.
She said to wait. So he does.
That’s enough.
You’re not explaining his life. You’re placing us in a moment we can see and feel. We feel the impatience of the moment. What are we, the audience, waiting for? Curiosity propels readers. That’s where memoir begins.
A scene doesn’t need to be dramatic – but it does need movement.
Taking the example above, we know a shift is coming. Something will change.
Contrasting these moments is part of the art of writing.
Sometimes it’s external—a conversation, an event, a disruption. Other times it’s internal. A realization. A subtle shift in how something is understood. Not just a change in how we interpret energy and events, but perhaps how we react as well.
It can also be contextual. Before your father lost his job, the house felt one way. After, it felt different. A whole family unit is having to adjust. That change holds weight, even if the moment itself is quiet.
When writers try to force meaning, it often shows up as stepping outside the moment too early to explain it. You start telling the reader what they should take from the scene before they’ve had the chance to experience it themselves.
Instead, stay inside the moment long enough to see where something naturally turns. Let the meaning emerge from what’s happening—not from what you think it should say.
Movement can look like:
One of the reasons writing feels overwhelming is because people try to do everything at once.
First, write what happened as you experienced it. Let it be imperfect. Let it be incomplete. Stop trying to give it significance. In fact, start with the more mundane moments—they’re often easier to access, and they may still carry weight when you look closely.
Second, revise for presence. This is where you shift from telling to showing. If you’ve written “it was tense,” go back and find where that tension actually appears—in dialogue, in body language, in what isn’t being said. Illustrate this for your audience.
Third, now you can shape meaning. Now you step back and ask what this moment connects to. What it begins to suggest. Where it fits within a larger pattern.
Breaking it up this way removes a lot of pressure. You’re not trying to produce a finished piece in one sitting. You’re building it in layers.
Part of reducing overwhelm is giving yourself structure that keeps the work contained and focused.
You don’t need a full outline. But you may find it helpful to ground yourself before you begin—where the scene starts, what’s happening, and where something shifts.
If you need more ways to keep the work manageable, here are a few that tend to help:
Remember, you don’t have to write every day. But you should try—even 15 minutes is enough to build continuity and keep the material active in your mind.
Just a few minutes a day keeps the work expanding, putting you closer towards your goal of a complete story, but in a bite-sized, manageable manner.
Getting stuck usually doesn’t mean you’ve run out of material. It usually means the way you’re approaching the moment isn’t unlocking anything new.
One way to shift that is to change the format entirely.
Instead of forcing a story, start collecting details. That moment at the beach. What’s everything you can remember physically there? Is it interesting? Is there something that stands out? Doesn’t belong? Now try reordering this list in a way that builds intrigue. Leave it. Now let’s go back to that same moment. What was said? Pull snippets of dialogue. Layer them like poetry. Chances are you’re now feeling inspired. This takes the pressure off describing everything at once and gathers raw material you can shape later.
Address a thank you note to someone connected to that moment—someone who helped, supported, or simply showed up in a way that mattered, even if only slightly.
This works especially well when the memory is complicated or heavy. Instead of trying to unpack complicated emotions all at once, you focus on one thread: what you’re grateful for. This isn’t toxic positivity. Almost every memoir has champions - who are yours?
For example, you might write:
Start simple. What did they do? What do you remember about how they showed up? Why does it still matter?
This doesn’t erase the complexity of the moment—it gives you a way into it.
Some writing coaches will say: just write a letter. I disagree.
Yes, that can be powerful. But it’s worth treading lightly, especially if you’re still close to the experience. A traditional letter can open the floodgates. You may end up with pages of cathartic release—which has value—but isn’t always immediately usable.
Shifting it into a thank you note creates a bit of structure. It helps you locate strength, resilience, and meaning—without getting lost in everything at once.
Break the moment down into components. What had to be in place for this to happen? What were the conditions, the dynamics, the timing?
Just like a recipe some ingredients are heavier. 2 cups of flour versus a half a tsp of vanilla. This can help you better understand the structure of the moment, especially when you’re trying to see how different elements came together - you’ll give some more weight than others.
Embrace these approaches to find another way to tell your story. Once something is on the page, you can always return to it and shape it into a more traditional scene.
Right now, you don’t need a full story. You don’t need a timeline. You don’t need to understand everything you’ve been through.
You need a place to begin.
A single scene. A moment you’re willing to sit with a little longer than you normally would. A willingness to write it without deciding too quickly whether it’s important enough or good enough.
Shut down judgment and just write.
Clarity doesn’t come first. It comes from the act of returning to the work—again and again—until something starts to take shape.
Your story doesn’t reveal itself all at once. It builds, piece by piece, as you give it your attention.
And it’s there. More accessible than you think.
Write about a time you were waiting for someone who was late.
Place yourself fully in that moment. Where are you? What’s happening around you? What are you doing while you wait?
Stay inside the scene. Let the details carry it.
Don’t explain it—just let it unfold.