Imagery Interview: Write an imagery interview where you will be interviewing
your grandfather who is a retired army man and would ask him about the
economy of the time when he was young
answer it guys correctly
Answers
Answer:
After thinking about it and putting it off for years, Leo finally decided to make that interview video with his grandmother. Born in 1929, the year the stock market crashed and the clouds of the Great Depression gathered, she would live through that economic crisis, life without antibiotics, the Second World War, assassinations, protests, terrorism, the space race, the civil rights movement and the computer age. She remembered the first electric refrigerator and the first TV set she ever saw. She had been the first person she knew to fly in an airplane and travel outside the country. She had even met two presidents.
Even at her advanced age, her mind was clear and her memory precise. This would be the video that Leo and his children and theirs would cherish as the official record of the family and as a glimpse into the history of the 20th century.
Leo was testing out his video equipment when the phone rang.
The interview would never happen.
WHILE VISITING ELDERLY LOVED ONES, START A CONVERSATION
When families gather for the holidays, it’s a great opportunity to learn about our elders’ life experiences. It doesn’t have to be a major video production and it doesn’t have to be a formal interview. But having these conversations can be very enlightening and can express to an aging loved one that their life and their story are valued.
Here are some starting points for this discussion that we’ve collected from our senior care experts—the caregivers many of you have come to know through our in-home care services. Not all of these questions will be relevant for your family, and you’ll likely think of others. But if you’re worried about where to start or how to keep the conversation going, these might be helpful. MARK ME AS BRAINLIAST