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519

Buy land.

Build a structure to be the family library. A small study/shelving shack.

Write a book that you want your decendants to read.

Make it a family requirement for everyone to at least publish one book into the family library. Anyone from your bloodline can enter and read first hand accounts of their ancestors ideals and experiences.

The only bias in your set of family books is that they have your best interest at heart.

None of my relatives did this for me. My grandfather is a little bitch and the more I was told about his father the more I felt connected to my great-grandfather. If he left a book behind i would have had a way to bond with the dead and get to know him better. Instead he's practically a stranger I only heard a few negative stories from by his ungrateful son.

Over the generations they can expand and build the library into something great as they continue to contribute.

No matter how much time passes, your decendents will be eternally grateful that you were the one who started it for them. They'll never feel lonely when they have generations of their ancestors passing down knowledge and sharing family tales one page flip away.

Buy land. Build a structure to be the family library. A small study/shelving shack. Write a book that you want your decendants to read. Make it a family requirement for everyone to at least publish one book into the family library. Anyone from your bloodline can enter and read first hand accounts of their ancestors ideals and experiences. The only bias in your set of family books is that they have your best interest at heart. None of my relatives did this for me. My grandfather is a little bitch and the more I was told about his father the more I felt connected to my great-grandfather. If he left a book behind i would have had a way to bond with the dead and get to know him better. Instead he's practically a stranger I only heard a few negative stories from by his ungrateful son. Over the generations they can expand and build the library into something great as they continue to contribute. No matter how much time passes, your decendents will be eternally grateful that you were the one who started it for them. They'll never feel lonely when they have generations of their ancestors passing down knowledge and sharing family tales one page flip away.

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[–] 0 pt

Why didn't you decide to have children?

I'm a bit old for a female working on that myself. As a man you can still have kids at that age, you just run the risk of birth defects at higher rates than normal. I'd still say trying is better than nothing.

I suppose if you can't even do that you can adopt, but that's nothing close to having one of your own. I can't imagine not having kids though. It's such a priority for me.

[–] 0 pt

I lived with a chick for ten years, she was on birf control, and also had an abortion. I didn't want kids. After her I was involved with gals that either had kids, or didn't want any. Then I was with a gal that got pregnant, she wanted to have it, then got an abortion. I found out after the fact, and was crushed. And so on. 60% of all men that ever lived never procreated, so, it's not like I'm an anomaly. Kids would cramp my style.