Jan 02, 2009 11:07
I stare out the window at the passersby on Newbury Street, or sneak
peeks at the anonymous bodies crowding a Green Line car and wonder. It’s
easy to categorize people. Suits. Computer geeks. Asian students. Red
Sox tourists. Construction workers. Counterculture rebels. So
many thousands of people, all fitting neatly into a mental model that
categorizes and reduces all those individuals into no more than a couple
dozen stereotypical profiles, with no more depth than a cardboard
cutout. We rarely even grant them the status of fellow humans; to us,
they’re more like obstacles.
And yet, I cannot reconcile this with my own sense of individuality. Not
because I think I’m so different or special, but because there’s no one
out there who shares my experiences.
Those of you who have long-term partners probably won’t remember the
terrible loneliness of knowing that no one knows your story, your
history. You’ve made enough shared history together that your distant
past doesn’t seem so pertinent to who you are anymore. You have today,
something immediate that you share with another person, and you can tell
stories about the rest. That’s nice, and in some ways I envy you.
Alone-and without summertime distractions like cycling-I can’t
help but reflect on my life and its past events. Every place, every
experience left some detritus on my memory and in my heart. Sure, I can
tell you endless stories about my past. Sitting on the big granite
boulder in front of our camp on Moxie Pond, trying to draw Mosquito
Mountain. Watching endless cars stop-then-go on the hill in front of our
house, which was part of the Maine driver’s test course (a particular
treat in winter, when the road was slick and cars often slid backwards
onto our front lawn). Playing wargames with 1/700 scale warship models
on a gymnasium floor with the owner of Kennebec Books. Swimming in the
quarry outside the town we jokingly called “Haiioweii” based on the
poorly-designed sign of a friend’s dad’s hardware store. Nights driving
home from Jean’s, traipsing around New York City with Linda, racing my
new car down the slalom of a Westborough office park, the abandon of
being at the edge of the stage for a Concussion Ensemble or Bentmen
show… Sorry, I won’t continue. It would, indeed, take a lifetime to
write down half the memories I cherish from this wonderful, blessed,
broad and wandering life I’ve led. God help me if I’m ever impelled to
write an autobiography!
The memory of these experiences is what I most wish to share with
someone. In some cases I’m fortunate enough to still be friends with
people who were there (probably including you, since you’re reading this). Just recently, three of my… well, three former
girlfriends mentioned how much they value the times we shared, that I
alone retain and preserve that memory of who they were, and how
important that is to them. That’s endlessly gratifying for me, for those
common memories are like jewels to me as well, locked away where few
will ever see, yet they are the true treasures of my life.
The melancholy comes from the fact that there are people I’ve lost and
memories I cannot share, and ultimately there’s no one person who shared
and keeps it all, other than myself. People have come and gone
throughout my life, and although I’ve been graced to share that path
with some truly wonderful people, there’s been no one person who has
remained, stayed to be part of it all, who can help me hold all those
treasures… It takes more than my two hands, believe me!
I’m not bemoaning life as a bachelor, which (speaking from experience)
suits me better than the alternative. It’s just that these memories are
such a large part of who I am, and I derived (and still derive) so
much enjoyment from them that I wish I could share them. If only I could
stay close with the people I shared them with at the time, or find some
way to effectively share those experiences with the people who weren’t.
So that somehow there’d be a way for someone else to experience the full
sum of who I am, who I have been, what I’ve done, and what I’ve seen.
And that can never happen.
Bringing this back to where I started, it’s hard for me to reconcile the
richness I sense in my own life with our natural inclination to
categorize, summarize, and genericize the mass of people around us. I
have seen so many things that no one else has, and I feel so attached to
those memories… but hasn’t every person out there got the same kind of
complex, meaningful, and completely unique history and set of
experiences?
And I imagine that, like me, they’re seeking to preserve and share their
unique stories. Perhaps the desire to somehow communicate and share that accumulation of memories is why our grandparents spent so much time
sitting around telling stories.
marriage,
melancholy,
life,
individuality,
memories,
history,
experiences,
grandparents