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Posts from the ‘Autobiography’ Category

Where’s the off switch?

Earlier this week, I had the delight of spending a couple of days with my niece, who is three (“my Mom says almost four”) years old.  I would have posted this sooner, but I needed a full day to recover.

It started off great!  I picked her up from daycare and she was excited to see me.  Excited!  Oh, how wonderful it is to be an Aunt.  She chattered all the way to the car.  Yep, this is great.  Still chattering.  Isn’t she cute? Just chattering away like a cute little blonde headed electronic monkey.  This is sure nice.  Of course it is!  I mean, I don’t get to spend time with her very often.  Not quality one-on-one time. Just the two of us.  Alone.  With no one else to intervene…um…interfere.  Chatter, chatter, chatter. Continue Reading…

Why Do I Hold On To Things?

It’s hard for me to get rid of some things.

It goes beyond keeping them – it’s holding on to them, even if I don’t ever look at them.  Even if I forget I have them until I find them again.  If I had someone to clear out the junk for me, they could probably get rid of a lot of stuff that I’d never miss.  But, alas, I am my own minion.  And I’m more likely to pack something up again than I am to let it go.

So what brought this up?  Well, I was cleaning (a shock to my system, in and of itself), and I was dusting off my tapes.

Tapes:

This isn’t the first time I’ve dusted the tapes and asked myself, “Why?  You have tapes and no tape player.  Oh, and did you know this is 2011?”

“Why, why – why is a crooked letter, pet.”

When I confront myself with the possibility of getting rid of truly old and un-necessary items, I’ve typically just thought, “No, don’t want to,” and moved on.  So today I’m really trying to give it a little more thought.  Ok, so why is it that I’m able to get rid of VHS movies that I replace with DVD?  Bam, Goodwill bag, and it’s gone, I couldn’t care less.  I’m surprised that I never thought about that before.  It actually makes me happy – one less clunky VHS, a little more space, happy times.  But with the tapes it’s different; I just can’t get rid of them.

I should say I don’t want to get rid of them.

So why not the tapes?  On the surface, I don’t have a solid answer.  I just don’t want them to be gone.  Ok, so I’m really looking them over, and I’m realizing that there are a few that I could toss today(1).  And again, I’m surprised.  I guess I haven’t taken any time with it before.  I’ve just made a quick blanket decision, “tapes stay”, and that was it.

So I dig a little deeper into myself to pull out a reason.

As I look over the titles and contemplate letting go, I finally grasp the understanding that these tapes are a physical representation of my memories.  Memories of carrying my boom box around the neighborhood, of riding the bus to NYC on senior trip, of burning up the batteries in Margaret’s tape player outside the Emergency Room.  And there’s so much more.  These tapes are the soundtrack of my youth.

And of my friendships: Rick Springfield and Olivia Newton John belong to Angie & Robin; Stevie Nicks, Heart, Freebird and Slippery When Wet belong to Margaret W.; R.E.M., U2, INXS, Indigo Girls, The Smiths are Margaret C., Toni & Jessi; Indian Summer, Bruce Hornsby and Amy Grant belong to Christie, Pam and Laurie; Alan Jackson and Allison Krauss belong to Chris, and so on…For every period, there is a playlist.  There are songs that come on and make me think of working at the amusement park with my friends, songs that put me in the front seat of a car “cruising town” and songs that have me right back in the mountains during college.  And let me tell you, Nostalgia is a powerful drug.

Peyton’s Little Man

I have a little man that my nephew Peyton made six or seven years ago.  It’s been sitting on my table ever since.  Logan made a lizard that’s been on my window at least that long.  I keep those things because it’s like saying “They were here and they loved me.”  We spent time together and they loved me, and they made these things for me because they loved me.  By the way, did I tell you they love me?  I don’t need art or presents to know I’m loved, but to throw away his little man feels like throwing Peyton away.  Then again, I’ve thrown away plenty of “art” over the years, so what is it about these two particular items that won’t let me go?  Is it simply that the longer I hold on, the harder it is to let go?

Logan’s Lizard

I am not someone who wants to go back and relive the past(2).  God forbid.  It was difficult enough the first time.  But I am a nostalgic person and sometimes it’s hard to look at old photos and remember.  Sometimes it makes me happy.  But other times, it just makes me sad that good times pass by so quickly and that life changes.

Just like the universe, we are slowly and surely spreading apart from one another.  What started off as the nucleus of a family – grandparents, parents, aunts, uncles and cousins – begins to separate out in a starburst of kids and more kids and grandkids and great grandkids, and it spreads further and further apart.  Families get bigger, you have more commitments, you have your own kids and you’re involved in their comings and goings and doings.  Life just gets bigger and more complicated as you get older.  I don’t have to always like it, and I can get really sad – not all the time, but sometimes – about the fact that I’ll never get that moment back again, or I’ll never be close to that person like I once was, and it hurts my heart.

Maybe that’s why I sometimes feel that digital communication is enough.  You can’t be lonely for people when you don’t commit yourself too deeply on an emotional level.  Maybe I just need digital communication to be enough.

Hmmm…this has taken a turn somewhere and I’m not sure…I’m not entirely sure how to end this sentence, much less this post.

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Want to see my records?

Records:

When in doubt change the subject.  Or change it back, as the case may be.  So…

As for the albums, it’s more that I just want to keep them.  Yeah, I need to keep those.  I mean, I have Thriller on vinyl.  And The Breakfast Club soundtrack.  I bought my first Stevie Nicks on vinyl.  Can’t pry me loose from my albums.

I should probably admit that I have a hard time getting rid of my things in general.  It gets easier the more that I work with myself, reminding myself that I don’t need it.  Objects aren’t memories.  Memories are in your heart.  So I take pictures to maintain the memory, and then I let it go.  Some things are still hard to part with, and so I don’t.  I will when I’m ready.

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1 But I didn’t 🙂  Go figure.

2 It’s true about all the things that might be different, It’s A Wonderful Life style.  When contemplating a decision that I would change if I had it to do over, I realized that my friend’s child would not have been born.  Simply reversing a move from one town to another would have altered more futures than mine – and negated his existence altogether.

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Items of Interest:

Is Digital Communication Enough

What Do You Hold On To?

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Nostalgia:   a mixed feeling of happiness, sadness, and longing when recalling a person, place, or event from the past, or the past in general

Nucleus:    a central or most important item or part that has others grouped or built around it

Is Digital Communication Enough?

I recently read an interesting blog by MaggieCakes.  Social Media and The Art of Storytelling discusses whether storytelling as an art form is being jeopardized by the ever-increasing popularity of social media sites.

A couple of items I plucked out of her blog:

  • “Professional storyteller Anne Rutherford…believes the communications over digital technology, particularly via social media, are causing us to cut back on our in-person interactions, and thus on our chances to tell and listen to stories.”
  • MaggieCakes: “We use social media to connect and to share about our lives.  Really, our posts, tweets, and status updates come together to tell our stories…we’re all writing our autobiographies, whether we know it or not.”

I so agree with Maggie.  Our use of Social Media sites, including photo and video sharing, truly perpetuates storytelling in the most basic of forms – autobiography.  No imagination required.

Maggie’s blog and the resultant comments really got me thinking about a few things, particularly regarding social interactions.  Her discussion revolved around storytelling, but I kept thinking about my own personal relationships.  And I couldn’t stop myself from wondering, “Is in-person necessary, or is digital communication enough?” Continue Reading…

What is the lesson of a “bright and beautiful day”?

When I was 20, I worked in Washington, D.C., which was about 50 miles from my home.  Those miles translated to at least an hour and a half commute each day, each way.  However many years later (wouldn’t you like to know!), I can still get a clear mental picture of the van and my fellow commuters, some of whom were more colorful than others.  For example, there was this one man in my vanpool that started each ride with, “What a bright and beautiful day!”  Come rain or come shine, “What a bright and beautiful day!”  And then he told every woman on the van how beautiful she looked.  I mean, this was a guy who tackled each day with a positive, grateful-to-be-alive attitude.  And he meant it, too!

The rest of us thought it was really annoying. Continue Reading…