Fuzzy Times
No reason for the featured image – other than it reminds me of sun, during yet another grey cloudy drippy day here in the Northeast.
They don’t tell you when you are young, that when you get older you will have trouble remembering all the little details of your life. It’s one of the things that older me realizes, but younger me never had an appreciation for – that I wouldn’t always be able to easily just go and retrieve memories of childhood, or teenage years, or even young adulthood, when it got to be later in life.
They don’t tell you that when you get past-middle-aged, that you won’t remember those conversations you had with your partner that changed your life, or you won’t remember the cute things your children said to you when they were tiny, or places that you saw or the spaces that you inhabited. It all gets incredibly fuzzy.
I lived in a house in my twenties for seven years, as an adult, and I can’t remember what the bedroom looked like, at all. I slept there, with my wife, for seven years and I have no idea. About the only thing I can remember of that house is the downstairs bathroom (which I cut a hole in the wall of with a chainsaw, to put in a larger window) and the cabinets I built in the living room where our stereo and books and childrens toys went. It seems obvious why I remember those two things – but I can drive by that house now, and look at it from the outside, and I can’t remember any of the events that happened there.
It was the first house we bought, less than a year after we were married. It was where we brought our first baby home. And our second baby, and probably our third – but I can’t remember actually, if that was in that house, or the larger one we moved to during that time (when we had three small children and a two-bedroom house was not cutting it anymore).
That second house was an upgrade in size and place – bigger house, bigger yard, room for a swingset, woods in the back. I have more memories of that house, but still not much – we lived there another seven years. I remember when I cut down one of the huge dead trees in the back and the lady from next door (who was on the town Shade Tree Commission) came running out telling me I couldn’t do that without the towns permission. I told her it was already dead, and coming down one way or another – I was just choosing the way.
That house, I can remember the bedroom, and what the kitchen looked like, and the wallpaper we put up. I remember the knee wall that separated the kitchen and living room, making a large space (this was when “open concept” was still a pretty new thing). I remember the chair in the corner that my wife used to sit in to read the children stories – but mostly, I think I remember that because she has told me that that was her favorite part of that house.
There was a huge basement, which 14-foot ceilings – unfinished – because the house was built on the side of a hill and the builder had to make the foundation extra tall. We always wanted to do something spectacular with that basement, but we never did.
Our babies grew into big kids and pre-teens in that house, and again – I don’t remember any of that except small flashes. They never tell you when you are spending all that time with your kids, when you are pouring your heart and soul into every ounce of growing that they do – that you won’t remember 99.9% of what happened then, when you get older.
There were bad times, as with any children – and it seems that those are the .1% that are burned in my brain. I know there were good times – I know there were smiles and laughs and jokes and stories and rolling around on the floor and falling down and tears of joy. But I don’t remember any of it.
I wonder sometimes if this is just me, but when I ask friends and family who share my age bracket, their experiences seem to be the same.
There is so much that happens in our lives, it flows around and through us like a river every day, carrying a vast flood of sights, sounds, and experiences – we should know better when we are young to do everything we can to grab onto those and hold them. We should be inhaling those moments, bringing every one deep into our being, so they cannot be forgotten. But we don’t, and they are.
They don’t tell you that when you’re young, but they should.
If they did tell us when we were young we would still forget so I don’t think that would work. I bet if you asked your daughter and your wife if they remember any of the two houses I bet they could tell you all kinds of cool stories…Maybe your son also….ask them and who knows maybe they can fill in the blanks.
@jaythesmartone they do remember some things, but they are younger! ha 🙂
@thediarymaster
what about your wife? Does she remember?
@jaythesmartone she has a much more detailed memory than me, but for different things. It is very interesting to me, how different people’s minds work.
Warning Comment
I try to take advantage of the fact that we have much better technology now. My parents just sold the house that they designed themselves for our family when I was 8. I went there and took so many pictures and videos so I could look at them because that triggers memories.
@heffay that’s my approach now as well – in the present, lots of pictures and videos!
@thediarymaster I sound really old but I point out how lucky kids are now because it’s so easy to get good pictures and video of their life events. Compared to when we had to just hope that pictures would look good when they get developed.
@heffay I agree with you.
@heffay exactly!
Warning Comment
This is why I journal. Shoot! I forget yesterday the moment today began. I wake to a new world every morning so I journal to help hold some of it.
@snarkle I know, right? You’d think I would see that the obvious solution is to journal every day 🙂
@thediarymaster that’s how I do it
Warning Comment
I was going to agree with Jay because women are more emotional, usually. If you attach a memory to a strong emotion, it seals it in your brain. It seems that most of my emotions are negative, so most of my memories are of traumatic events. It makes me glad that I’ve kept a daily diary since I was 10. I write down daily mundane stuff, but it’s an accurate picture of my life and it helps me remember stuff.
@startingover_1 see, I wish I had kept a daily diary all my life – it’s so obvious now how wonderful it would have been to have all of this written down.
Warning Comment
Why the hell do we remember the bad and not the good? That’s stupid. I’m 45 but I remember the first phone number we had. It was before the 416/905 thing… 491-4759. I have selective memory I guess.. LOL
@albatrosswing that troubles me as well…and also, I remember my phone number growing up too!
@thediarymaster Shouldn’t we remember the good as well as the bad???
@albatrosswing we certainly should try!
Warning Comment
Well, now I know.
@queenofegypt 🙂
Warning Comment
“Oh, earth,you are too wonderful for anybody to realize you. Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it–every,every minute? (Emily)”
― Thornton Wilder, Our Town
@gypsywynd that’s a good one, thanks.
Warning Comment
Ahhh, hindsight is 20/20, yes… I have no regrets but one, but what I do know is that if I could go back in time I’d make damned sure younger me did some stuff differently. Unlike you, though, I’m cursed with a ridiculously accurate memory, back up to an age when most people don’t remember, and things haunt me heavily. For example, now that we have the likes of Google Street View, I plug in my addresses from childhood, where I lived with Mom, who’s now gone, and stare at the places for hours on end, remembering events, as if (and wishing that) staring will somehow bring her (or some part of her) back, longing for what I can no longer have. It doesn’t make for a peaceful existence, trust me. Consider yourself blessed, to a certain degree, that your memory is sort of unfaithful to you that way.
@thenerve I think you’re right about it’s possible to have “too good” of a memory – I think what I want is something in-between. I’ve never though of doing that with Google Street View – I might try that to see if that triggers memories.
Warning Comment
I like the pic
Warning Comment