Friends,
Yesterday, we introduced the concept of Core Memory and talked a bit about how faulty memory generally can be. How can we be certain about what we remember? One reader (and my wonderful editor by the way, Susan, suggested that regardless of the factual truth of a memory, the construct of a personal truth can be a take away from remembering. In another case, a reader pointed out how memories can be associated with emotional weight, and that’s what I’d like to talk about today.
If you’d like, if you missed yesterday’s discussion, you can read that here: Memory - Led Zeppelin and a Chevy Nova.
~ Dan
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When I was three and a half years old, we went to my grandmother’s house where a lot of the family had been waiting and were gathered around the TV. We were there a long time. I don’t remember anything about that day before or after.
I was sitting on the floor. My family was behind me. On the screen was a black and white fuzzy image of what looked like a creature of some sort climbing down a ladder. There were words that I didn’t understand and I was bored. I recall two things:
First, my family was very quiet, which was unusual.
Second, my father bent down next to me, leaned in close to my ear and said “I want you to remember this. This is important. Pay attention and remember this.” I don’t recall if he used those exact words, but something to that effect.
So I did. I paid attention. Hard. I focused all my little brain on whatever the heck was happening. A few moments later, the figure on my screen said, “Ok, I’m going to step off the LM now.” And then a few moments after that, he said. “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.”
My dad did that for me. He imprinted my memory so that literally the first thing I remember in my life was the moon landing. Without his words and his intensity, I doubt that would have stuck. Pretty amazing.
You can see the actual film and read a story about the camera that was used to film those first steps here: First Live Lunar Broadcast
Many years later, I looked all this up. It turns out, Neil Armstrong would have touched the moon’s surface at nearly 11pm EST. That also means that either they kept me awake or woke me up to watch it.
I mention this not-so-little remembrance because the latest social media parenting trend is to “create” core memories for your kids, and generally speaking you really can’t do that, at least according to clinical therapists and brain scientists. But my dad did do that for me in a way. It worked.
So, can you or not? Have all these adventures with Little Bean been for nothing or will something stick?
Here’s what I think. I think you can. But you’ll never be able to predict what part will stick, why or what emotional weight it will carry. I was not even four years old. I certainly remember watching the first moon landing and I’m grateful my father planted that memory for me.
But… when I think about it, it has no emotional weight for me. I don’t feel nostalgic about it. I can’t smell it or sense it. One of the greatest moments of - perhaps - all humankind and I don’t FEEL anything about it. I only remember it.
Contrast that to being out in a boat at around the same age fishing with my father, or one day when my mother took me to a touch a truck event and I got to touch the giant wheel of a utility truck, or my two older cousins holding either of my hands as I walked along the hot railroad tracks near my grandmother’s house.
I feel those memories in my bones. Those memories are the one’s that drive who I am as a father now. And all those memories stuck organically.
That’s the way to go it seems. Just get out there, do different things, keep trying to just BE with her. Something will stick. I’m sure of it!
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I was about 8 years old at the time. Although, I forgot that this event took place at 11:00 PM EST, I do distinctly recall watching it with my maternal grandparents, at their apartment duplex in Lynn, MA, and that my Zade, a Ukrainian Jew who came from the old country at about age 6, said something to me very similar to what your dad said to you. I also recall certain things he said to me while walking along Lynn Beach to the bakery and kosher butcher shop.
Furthermore, I've also taken a similar approach to you with my two children (son and daughter) and, of course, Rome, my only grandchild until the middle of this month (my daughter in Germany will be giving birth to her first child).
Your piece, like a lot of them, remind me of an EB White piece about memories of a summer trip to a lake with his father , that I read in high school. Speaking of long distance memories.
I agree, you never know what's going to stick. One of my earliest memories is being brought along with my mom and her best friend on, I think, a shopping trip. I barely remember being in the casual restaurant where they had lunch, then listening to the talk as I drifted to sleep in the backseat of the car. I don't feel anything emotionally when I think of it, but it still stuck. (Thanks for the shout-out!)