Tuesday, December 16, 2008

On Memory, Continued

I have no reason not to write. Yet I don't. And so here's my periodical self-flogging for it.

I just started reading Charlie Chaplin's autobiography, and it's raised a question in my mind that always surface when I read memoirs and autobiographies: how much of it is elaboration and how much of it is fact? And how is it possible to remember so far into the past about very specific details? It's made me think about the subject of memory, its extreme significance as a part of who we are, and especially as an element of our imagination. My mom pointed out that people used to be more literary; more people wrote in journals more than they do now. I don't know if I agree with her on this, but I have the feeling that both of our opinions are only anecdotal so there's little headway to be made there. All the same, it doesn't change the fact that things like journaling are an extremely valuable tool, to anybody, let alone writers. It sharpens our faculties, it can ward off mental deterioration in old age (or in youth!), since the mind is like a tool that needs constant sharpening to keep it in good use. I was thinking about the novel 1984, and how terribly easy it is to forget if you're not careful. To be erased from all records, and to be convinced by the authorities that any given person never existed, so your memory is in fact edited as is history. This is an extreme scenario, but then it makes you think about all the facts that weren't included by historians through the ages, and what facts were distorted to serve political or personal interests, and you realize it's not all that farfetched.

I was reflecting on my day and I nearly forgot what I had for breakfast. It's not something I'd ever need to know, but just the fact that it was only a few hours ago made it quite alarming. To be fair, the brain works like that, and it has a lot of information to process throughout the day that it's physically impossible to retain everything that happened to you in a day, all at once. But that's precisely why things like journaling is so useful. This practice has no immediate usefulness of course, but if nothing else it allows you to find the story in your existence. It focuses your attention to detail and it can simply amaze you at how rich and eventful even the most mundane of days has been. I did recall after the moment's panic, what I had for breakfast. I had pancakes and breakfast sausages made by my good friend Scott Whittaker. We had Mango Passionfruit green tea to go with it. It was a delicious one-in-the-afternoon breakfast.

I need to journal and document my life and the world for fear of forgetting who I am, and in time, who I was. As the Buddha said, if you want to understand the present, look at the past. What better way to understand who I am and where I am going, by observing where I came from. I feel confident enough in my memory right now in my life that I won't be forgetting these things any time soon, but that alone won't ever explain to me why some details are more significant than others, unless I actually process my experiences, slow down and really think about them, and for me the best way of doing that is sitting down and seeing what my thoughts look like in words. But that's not the only way either. Through photographs and art and newspaper clippings, old book reports, music, etc. you can trace an unbroken line through your life, and see more clearly where you where that line is leading you, like a golden thread out of a labyrinth.

1 comment:

Redcard Sanchez said...

Just last night I looked through all my old sketchbooks. It was strange to realise that the view I have now of the person I was back then is so simplified and inaccurate. Over the years, my memory of myself became distorted until it became my personal myth or archetype. Being confronted with a record of who I was helped break it down. That's my long way of saying yes, I agree.
Also, are you coming back to Calgary for the holidays? I realised I barely saw you over the summer, and it would be nice to catch up.