Remember? Why?

 
 
 

We’d like for you to write about your first memory. Reach way back into your mind, try to find that first, earliest memory, and share it with us through your words.  Don’t just tell us what you remember, show us, make us feel what you felt, take us with you back to that first clear (or hazy) memory of your past.

 

 

 

 

Ouch! 

When this prompt came up last week, I cringed; memories, for me, especially early ones, aren’t terribly pleasant.  Why is it that good memories are sometimes forgotten but bad ones tend to linger way too long?

It’s okay, not playing the martyr here, not at all.  I honestly cannot offer a fitting response this prompt-time around but.. I still wanted to participate, in some way.   

Various posts on my blog have delved into my rough childhood and that’s because, at the point when I wrote them, I felt the need to put it out there, especially after having private discussions with several people.   Child abuse survivors often reach out to let others know they are not alone.  For now, I’ll just leave those memories slink off into some corner where they will hide, and wait, always reminding me that they aren’t far away.

How about someone else’s memories, or lack thereof?  Can I bend the rules…please?

For most of her life, my late mother had an uncanny ability to deliberately erase any memory which made her..uncomfortable.  Dementia crept in and relieved her of that job along with the ability to think – the very brain functions that shaped the person she once was.  Dealing with this as her daughter and caregiver was understandably frustrating.  All I can compare it to is when people speak very loudly to someone who doesn’t speak English, hoping they can make themselves understood.

Being in the company of someone with memory loss, 24/7,  finds you  always asking questions, the same ones, only to be met with a blank stare.  There is so much you need to know, things you neglected to ask at a time when there might have been a more cognizant response.  Sadly, those answers are never what you need to hear but you keep asking.  There is always a chance that some spark of remembering will come out of nowhere.

I waited for that opportunity to grab just one fleeting recollection.  That happened shortly before my mother died but, sadly, I waited too long.  Seconds too long.  I missed that last chance to recover a tiny bit of what Dementia had stolen; a joy, sorrow or some motherly recognition.  Her memory quickly flew away and out of sight even though I prodded for its return by asking mother to try hard to remember.

Her answer to me was…“Remember?…Why?”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The Window…

 

Create around one at least a small circle where matters are arranged as one wants them to be…Anna Freud

 

There is so much beyond what I can see

Sitting by this window

Life, twisting, turning. coming full circle

Returning to an empty chair

 

All that I’ve dreamed

Images slowly fading

Reflections of regret

Stare back through clouded glass

 

Memories, hidden in closets

Photographs of, now silent, smiles

Rest neatly, on bureaus and walls

Reminders of pain and joy

 

All that I’ve been

All I still hope to be

Lingers in an empty chair

Sitting by this window

This has been my response to a Flicker of Inspiration Prompt #9: House from The Lightning and the Lightning Bug

                                          

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Leave out all the rest

I dreamed I was missing
You were so scared
But no one would listen
‘Cause no one else cared
After my dreaming
I woke with this fear
What am I leaving
When I’m done here?
So if you’re asking me
I want you to know
When my time comes
Forget the wrong that I’ve done
Help me leave behind some
Reasons to be missed
And don’t resent me
And when you’re feeling empty
Keep me in your memory
Leave out all the rest

From the moment I first heard it in the movie theater, this song, “Leave Out All The Rest” from “Twilight”, captured my soul.  Haunting words and music that run through my mind as I rush through these golden years frantically trying to put my little world in order.

I don’t know if it’s just me, at this stage of my life, wondering about what I’ll leave behind.  Not material things, mind you, but the quality of memories in the minds of those closest to me, the people I’ve loved in my lifetime.

So much of what we speak about, on an almost daily basis, involves time.  It seems we never have enough of it and painfully watch as it speeds past us with each passing year.

I worry about the mistakes I’ve made which might overshadow any of the positive things I’ve accomplished.  Let’s face it, when someone dies, everyone gathers to celebrate that departed life, in some fashion.  And then, time passes, softening the sorrow and sentimental imagery.  Painful thoughts, like sharp pricks of a pin, bring reminders of unhappy times, causing people to deliberately not think about that name engraved on a slab of marble.  That name, which once represented a loving human being, all too often, ends up being forgotten in a crowded field of hallowed ground.

We clean out our closets and attics, ridding ourselves of needless accumulations.  As our mortality stares back at us in some mirror, we rush to mend broken family fences or renew old friendships, keeping a wary eye on that mystical hourglass of time.  Why don’t we have this fear when we’re young enough to change things and mold our lives in a more positive direction?  This so-called wisdom we achieve in later life could be put to so much better use when there is an expanse of time still to be enjoyed…and fulfilled.

I want to be remembered, not with tears but with smiles.  Spare me any resentment and not allow my memory to harbor thoughts of anger or emptiness.  Any of this would mean that my time on earth was wasted.

For now, I’m working very hard on reasons to be missed.

 

From The Writer’s Workshop…

An anthem, typically, is a song of praise, or gladness but can also reflect a point-of-view.   This song did just that when I first wrote this post a while back.  Still does.   A reflection of my life and feelings.  Enough said.

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