Saturday, February 8, 2025

The Past is Never Dead


Because I'm sure you all don't want to read another post about shelving books and other library activities, how about a little trip down memory lane?

I went digging around in my digital archives last night to try to find some writing I did years ago that I thought I might be able to turn into a post. In 2006 or so I wrote a lot about my childhood and my life, partly because I'd gone to a therapist who encouraged it, and partly because I was hypochondriacal and convinced I was going to die (these two things are not unrelated), and I wanted to write down all my stories.

I was thinking specifically about a time when I "ran away" as a little kid, and went meandering aimlessly through my neighborhood until someone came and got me. I was sure I had written all that down and wanted to refresh my memory.

I got briefly distracted when I found the much more recent photo above, from May 2015, featuring Olga as a graceful young lady (!) watching Dave come into the living room. We'd just moved into this flat the previous summer, and I'm struck by how empty the place looks compared to now. And doesn't Olga look robust?! She was only about five years old then. (She got up with me this morning but now she's back in bed as I write this.)


I also found this picture, which isn't even mine -- it's something I took off the Internet because we used to have cups just like these when I was a kid. As I recall, I sold sets of them in 1978 or so as part of a school fundraiser for the marching band. Or maybe for the Boy Scouts.

Anyway, we wound up with a set and I have never forgotten them. My brother and I still talk about them. I have no idea what happened to ours, but similar cups are still available on eBay and other resale sites. I'm sure bazillions of them were made. They're very '70s.

I finally found the writing I was looking for. Here's a snippet:
The Central Florida that I knew as a child has disappeared from many areas. Back then, it was already suburbia, but sparsely developed. There were pine lilies in the vacant lots in autumn and vast tracts of palmetto and scrub. The road in front of our house was unpaved white limestone marl. Quail ran across our backyard in a single-file line, and mayflies blanketed the windows in spring.

The sunlight, the coarse grass, the pine needles, the fire ants. The sighing of the wind in the pines. The stinky, decayed smell of the muddy lakeshore. All of it is so deeply embedded in me that I feel like part of the land – I feel like the tannins that darken the water in Lake Wisteria are flowing through my veins. I may be part alligator.
A few paragraphs later:
(My brother and I) went “camping” together one day, packing our little school bags with slices of white bread and jars of water. We walked to the end of the road. Then Mr. Betz drove up and told us to go home, that Mom was worried, and so we did.
That's it?! Not quite the memory I have now, which is that I walked not only to the end of the road but to a distant part of an adjacent road, and that my brother wasn't with me, and that I was not "camping" but running away. But I may be conflating two different incidents, neither one particularly significant or eventful. I thought I'd written more. Oh well.


This is not my picture, but one my brother took last November while attending a remembrance for my mom at the church we grew up in. (And thus, also related to my childhood and this post!) I had no pictures of the sanctuary and I asked him to get some, having spent many hours staring up at those stained glass windows of Jesus, which at the time were shadowed by the fronds of a palm tree planted outside that back wall.

I suppose I'm thinking more about Florida now that I'm preparing to go back there in a week's time. One of the tasks my brother and I have planned is to spread my mom's ashes near where we grew up.

Anyway, thanks for indulging this rather disjoined trek down memory lane. As William Faulkner wrote, "The past is never dead. It's not even past."

53 comments:

  1. You are such a gifted writer. I love these memories. The photo of Dave and Olga is heartwarming. Those smiley face cups would have made me crazy at the time. I felt like I OD’d on smiley faces. They were everywhere.

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    1. I liked the Dave and Olga photo too. It makes me wonder how many other good photos I have tucked away in my archives that I never look at!

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  2. Love the photo of Dave and Olga and I remember lots of those smiley faces from my teen years! Telling your stories is an excellent idea.

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    1. Smileys were such a thing back then! I guess I am telling my stories, gradually, on this blog.

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  3. I do enjoy a trip down Memory Lane, and hearing about other people's lives, past and present.

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    1. I do too. The ins and outs of daily life are the most interesting subject, to me.

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  4. I really enjoyed reading this post, and your trip down memory lane. I didn't think it was disjointed at all. As we think back to things that happened in our lives, in a way our brains zig and zag as one memory leads to another. And as Mitchell said, you are indeed a gifted writer.

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    1. Yeah, it's funny how one story leads to another story, and how the memories morph over time.

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  5. It's fascinating to have a glimpse of someone else's life. Photographs are powerful hooks.

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    1. I guess that's why we take them! :) I've also read that songs are powerful cues -- we remember where we were when certain music was popular. I know I do.

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  6. Your writing is so visual -- it says a great deal with few but beautifully chosen words. I enjoyed it. But my favorite -- that photo of Olga and Dave. They look like they are sizing each other up, but lovingly!

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    1. I'm actually rather wordy as a writer, I think. I have a few "verbal tics" that surface over and over again and that I could do without. But thank you!

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  7. It is funny the things we remember so vividly ... like Smiley Face Cups. I wonder why that is, when sometimes we forget important details in favor of Smiley Faces.

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  8. Many years ago, I saved up money I earned through various tasks and mailed off a Froot Loops box top for my own Toucan Sam drinking glass, complete with orange feet protruding off the bottom. I loved that glass dearly but for the life of me, can't remember when it disappeared out of my life. I'm guessing mom got tired of it and ditched it one day while I was at school and didn't use it regularly anymore.

    I just had to check and found one on ebay. It doesn't look quite as cool as what I remember.
    https://www.ebay.com/itm/375109412688

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    1. I don't remember ever seeing one of those cups, but I can see why it impressed you at the time! What's interesting about the items for sale in that link is that all but one of them were made in the USA. You'd never see that now.

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  9. I've read somewhere that each time we recall a specific memory, we change it somehow. I think my memories of occasions are often very divergent from that of my friends and relatives...and this might explain why.

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    1. Oh, that's interesting. And it does seem possible. I guess the faulty elements of our memories become more solidified the more we "recall" them, until it's hard to tell what's true and what's not.

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  10. Olga Girl And That Look , Outstanding

    Stay Strong Brother ,
    Cheers

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  11. Memory is such an odd thing. I think we keep overlaying it with later experience. I'm pretty sure I'm not very accurate with my own, blending different comments and events into what I only think is an accurate account.

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  12. It's good that you have recorded so many memories on your blog - a nice way to save them. I'm sure going to Florida next week will trigger more memories for you. Hope it is a pleasant trip and you have good weather.

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    1. That's partly my goal for the blog -- to help me remember things. My own memory is not great and it's widely variable (I remember things different ways at different times) so it's good to write down events when they're new and fresh.

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  13. Steve, there is really some beautiful writing here and in the linked memory. You and I share so much in that we are probably both part alligator with that tannin-dyed water running through our veins. I went to Presbyterian churches too. I don't recall ever hearing a sermon with any fire or brimstone in it. An overall gentle religion. And I went to Youth Groups too. I remember us studying Jonathon Livington Seagull.
    Oh my god.
    I think that after time has passed, our memories may have become memories of memories. For me, it is easier to remember quick image/scenes and the feeling that experience evoked. Like, tiny bits of film with snapshots included.
    This is a really lovely post. Thought provoking and somehow tender.

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    1. Coming from a fellow Floridian, your words mean a lot. :)

      No, the Presbyterians were definitely not fire-and-brimstone types. In fact I don't remember us ever really talking about hell. I had a friend in high school who came from a fundamentalist household and she was terrified of hell, and I always thought that was so strange. I did go to a Baptist vacation bible school when I was very young, and even that seemed more extreme than what I was used to!

      Jonathan Livingston Seagull! That was a HUGE book back then!

      "Memories of memories" -- I think that's very true.

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  14. You have a beautiful way with words. You descriptions of your youthful Florida are so great I can almost smell the musty waters.

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    1. Thank you! Those memories of the natural world are sort of sad for me now because it's disappearing in my part of the state.

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  15. Excellent writing and memories. Childhood ones are always very confusing because they happened long ago and our perceptions of the event were radically different. I'm sure going back to Florida brings up many feelings and thoughts of the past.

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    1. Yeah, I think all of this is stirring in my mind partly because I'm preparing for this trip.

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  16. This is beautiful to read. The past inspired you here. Thank you.
    Memories keep us afloat, keep us young, even if they are not as exact as the actual event was.

    I once ran away from my grandmother's house where I was sent to stay for a week, aged 5 or so. I have a clear image of her standing at the front door, watching me walk away and still standing there, arms folded, when I returned, hours later, but not the strictly 60 minute hours.

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    1. Ha! Parents know that little kids are going to come back, probably sooner rather than later. It's when older ones run away that they have to worry.

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  17. I enjoyed this look back (photos AND words) and love the smiley face cups. One of my brothers detested smileys and I had tiny smiley stickers I would strategically place throughout his room just to aggravate him. 😈

    Did you ask your brother about the camping/running away episode? Maybe he remembers.

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    1. Ha! Well, if you had to annoy your brother, smiley faces were a nice way to do it.

      My brother might remember that outing better than I do, if he indeed was there, but he would have been very little -- maybe four or so. Like I said, I think I'm conflating different events into a single memory.

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  18. Well said that past is never dead. We move on by living for the moment

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  19. I'm intrigued by people's childhood memories, maybe because I have so many myself. My brother says he can hardly remember anything from his growing-up years. I find that so strange. Maybe forming stronger memories has something to do with basic interests like reading and language (his strengths were more on the math side). Anyway, all that just to say that I especially enjoyed your post today :)

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    1. It could be that memories rely more on verbal or storytelling skills. That's an interesting theory. I can't imagine not remembering things from my youth. A therapist might suggest that he's blocking them out!

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  20. Lovely post. I find, my past plays largely in who I am today. Memories can be sharp or vague but still integral.

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    1. Definitely. We are shaped by all the things we've done and the things that have happened to us.

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  21. You're younger than me, but I find the older I get, the more I think about the past. When my daughter visits, it's very weird how differently we remember things.

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    1. I wonder if that's because we have so much "past" now? When you're 20 you only have 20 years (and really 15) to think back on. Now I have something approaching 60 years to remember!

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  22. Olga looks as startled as I was by Dave's "jammies".

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    1. Ha! Yeah, he got rid of those jammies several years ago. The pants were too short, as I recall.

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  23. Isn't it funny how dramatic we remember things to be and how disappointing the reality is when reminded as adults.

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    1. It's true! I guess what seems dramatic to a child may no longer seem so to an adult.

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  24. sometimes our minds just wander and we get a disjointed post. Who said disjointed posts were bad?

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  25. It's a lovely trip down memory lane. I have a memory of declaring I was going to run away and my mum offering to pack my case for me. What?? She wanted me gone? I'll show her! I'll stick around so she has to put up with me! In later years my own daughter aged 5 wanted to go and live with her Grandma, I managed to convince her it was against the law to travel alone and she would have to wait until she was 16.

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  26. Ha! Well, this "writing" I was excavating was actually supposed to be a first stab at a book. Why I think anyone would want to read a book about me is another question.

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  27. Makes you wonder about memories. How much of what we remember about something vs what really happened. My sister and I often had different memories of the same event. Nice writing though in the first paragraph.

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  28. Well it reminded me a lot of some of my favorite southern authors, so I say go for it!

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