The Memory Lake
By Error_404
- 3893 reads
The faces are the first to fade. It is as if the waters of a lake close over them and they sink slowly down until there is no trace of them whatsoever. I try to retrieve my mother’s face but it is too far gone now for me to bring it back. An element perhaps, but it is no more than an echo; a worn out radio signal washed out by the white noise of all the intervening years.
My grandmother is even deeper. Our brief coexistence was too short for her to imprint itself on my memory. I can conjure up only the idea of an old woman who had Ryvita and marmalade for breakfast and who would always break a piece off for us to eat. But there is no map of her face. I cannot conjure up her eyes or how she might have looked when she smiled. I know only that she was short and and maybe had yellow tinged skin. I could not tell you if she was a good woman or bad. She existed once. That is all I can tell you. Ask me her name and I would not be able to tell you.
In later life, other things begin to topple unnoticed into the water. Words and names mostly. I will be halfway through some utterance or another and I will come to an unexpected gap, where a
word or a phrase has been washed away like a bridge. It happens frequently now. Yesterday I was in the kitchen when Natalie asked me what kind of soup I was making. When I tried to tell her, all I could manage was ‘potato and … ,‘ and then nothing. I fished around beneath the surface of the lake but couldn’t find the missing word. I turned to look at the long corrugated green stems lying on the worktop. I felt the panic rising. Then, my fingers suddenly closed around it and I pulled it dripping from the water. ‘Celery,’ I said, relieved.
Faces first, and later the words and names. That’s the order they go in.
- Log in to post comments
Comments
the things we forget is
the things we forget is ourselves. great writing. wisdom here, briefly.
- Log in to post comments
It gets harder as we get
It gets harder as we get older. I can relate to this story.
Jenny.
- Log in to post comments
A really effective piece of
A really effective piece of writing - well done!
- Log in to post comments
This fine piece of writing is
This fine piece of writing is our Facebook and Twitter Pick of the Day!
Please share/retweet if you enjoyed it too
Picture Credit:https://tinyurl.com/y7q3msoz
- Log in to post comments
Memory is very much like a
Memory is very much like a lake. A good analogy. Enjoyed reading this. Rachel :)
- Log in to post comments
Sometimes we forget things
Sometimes we forget things because we want to forget them.
- Log in to post comments
This is really puzzling
This is really puzzling I think you're making a mistake. I wonder how you did at school in exams and that? Did you know all the answers? I was thinking more in terms of physical pain injury and torture as well as terrible mental suffering like acute depression or of seeing something terrible happen. You definitely forget trauma like that with time becomes more and more vague. To be thankfull for.
All the best!
- Log in to post comments
A strong evocative piece
A strong evocative piece about time and memory. I really enjoyed the pool metaphor, and the way you tied it in at the end with the 'dripping' of the celery.
- Log in to post comments
This is so effectively
This is so effectively written - captures the fear of that lost word perfecly. I too have had more words and names lost undewater of late- someone told me when we were young we forgot things all the time and never gave it a worry but age makes us worry that the lost word or name is something more terrifiying and we stress as we grapple more trying to rerieve it. No matter the reason, it is a very unsettling feeling - that underwater element is spot on.
So glad you posted this and well deserving of the golden cherries!
- Log in to post comments
This profound and touching
This profound and touching piece is our story of the week. Well done!
- Log in to post comments