Hi Phyllis, This is a subject I'd like to hear addressed. I am first generation American and the genealogist for the entire family. We know who every individual is and where they are located. I am returning to (what's now Romania) to gather more documents and memorabilia from the church, my living aunt, and our peoples homes whose house numbers are on the church records and are still standing, frozen in time. I now have many boxes of documents, photos, emails, memorabilia including important historical artifacts. A piece of tile from the roof of my gr. grandfathers church in Frauendorf Transylvania; an official military booklet documenting my uncles route locations through W.W.I in the German Army as they fought the Russian Army and similar items. I am now being invited to yearly family reunions and picnics in Montana and Oregon. I feel like I have a mini museum which could be a traveling event when I go. It's a huge cataloging job which I am willing to do. At his point, I'm focusing on the hundreds of photos, recent and vintage. Of course many family members want copies. I think I should be keeping a log of everything I do because various family members begin emailing me with additional information about a specific person (usually dead) and I'm pulled from one person to another and forget who or what I was working on before. I would like to hear an ongoing discussion about practical ways of organizing a huge collection of things and information (and misinformation). I can't believe I'm the only genealogist that gets overwhelmed with how to organize an out of control project. Thanks for any consideration of this dilemma. Shirley Taylor