The veils of memory
by Jack GrantWe humans are cursed with memories that fade, and often those we wish to keep retreat faster than we wish. The veils of memory fall down over the images in our mind, slowly obscuring them into a sfumato that preserves the rough outlines while softening the details that were so sharp before.
In a cruel twist, memories that we do not want haunt us with a clarity that becomes more harshly edged as we seek the solace granted by forgetting.
Nothing fixes a thing so intensely in the memory as the wish to forget it.
-Michel de Montaigne
Memory of details, eidetic but not the “photographic” of legend, has served me well, a legacy of my father who also apparently had this talent according to what I have learned from his good friends.
Yet it can be as much a curse as a blessing if the veils of memory do not completely cover the pain.
At times, the veils of memory have rents that show clearly isolated details, the white walls, the labels on the electrical outlets “do not use for critical equipment” with the associated thought of what equipment in Intensive Care is not critical, the contour seen of a face familiar yet foreign because of the gauntness, the susurration heard as fluids are pumped out of a chest cavity, the harsh red-on-black numbers on a screen showing the blood pressure too low to sustain the brain, the face of my father, so familiar yet so unknown because I had so rarely seen him even sleeping before, much less unconscious and dying, a vigil on a Christmas night that I would not wish upon anyone.
These tears in the veils of my memory will not be covered by time, and there are other rips in the shroud equally enduring that prevent me from forgetting details, graven images that I will never reveal to anyone, no matter how close they are to me.
These tears in the veils of my memory prompt tears in my eyes that I cannot seem to shed.
I have deliberately turned my mind from these images so that I can take care of the business necessary to ensure my Mom has the financial security my Dad wished and planned for her to have, a plan that he did not have time to complete because of the sudden return of the cancer that plagued him.
I grieved for my Dad in early November when I was in France and was first told that they had found a recurrence of his cancer because I knew I would have to hold things together when the inevitable occurred. The inevitable occurred far sooner than I expected, although later than I feared, allowing me an all too brief three days with my Dad before we called the ambulance to take him to the hospital over his objections, after a third collapse in one day, a day when I tried to help him as much as I could while recognizing that no help any mortal source could give would have been sufficient.
Although I grieved for a month before I returned to the US and knew what was coming, and although I have forced myself to stay focused on what needs to be done to take care of my Mom, my Dad’s wife and the woman he loved for so many years, I have not yet finished grieving for my Dad and the time measured in years that I had hoped for us to have together in his retirement that he earned and so well deserved to have but never received.
Life is cruel sometimes.
For me, the veils of memory are not obscuring with seemingly comforting forgetfulness the images, sounds, and feelings of the last five days of my father’s life which I witnessed a full year after I had last visited, when he seemed healthy.
I do not know if this sharp remembrance is a blessing or a curse.
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4 Comments so far
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These are the types of memories that define us.
My personal belief is that we hold on to these memories because they represent aspects of ourselves, our psyche.
And to lose these memories would be like losing a part of ourselves.
By Ryan S on 01.18.06 18:30
Those stark memories will be with you always. But time will temper them. As Ryan stated, those memories along with the good ones define who you are.
Keeping you and your family in my prayers.
By seawitch on 01.19.06 14:18
A blessing or a curse?
It’s either, both, or neither…
Which it is depends on you.
By TeaFizz on 01.19.06 18:23
I guess it’s always this way, that you have to hold together and do the most for others when you’re being torn apart yourself. That too is both a blessing and a curse.
I once read that the ancient Chinese believed that after the death of a parent you should do nothing for one year but write poetry. As if. That was the aristocratic Chinese, obviously.
By amba (Annie Gottlieb) on 01.22.06 16:45
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