Saturday, June 21st 2008

Memoirs and the twisted tyranny of our memories

She crawls into my lap and asks, “Tell me about when you were little.”

And I reply, “I used to only play with trucks and blocks, never dolls. I used to love to eat the jellied top off tinned ham and watch grilled cheese cook in our old stove on the far wall of the kitchen where I grew up. I hung out at the local racetrack with my bike and rode the hills cut into the paddocks made by other budding BMX-ers.”

She tugs on my shirt and asks, “Now tell me about when daddy was little.”

“Your daddy’s family owns a supermarket in the town where he grew up and he used to get up to lots of adventures, and naughtiness, with his older brothers (and Lee!). He barely spoke a word until he was about three, but they knew he could’ve if he wanted. He was just being obstinate.”

She puts her lips to my ears, “And what about Riley?”

“Your brother was born on a Friday afternoon, long after he was due, so your Nanny only barely got to meet him before she had to catch her flight home again the following day. You were the first person your brother smiled at; he clearly picked you from the start as kin.”

She smiles, coming to her favourite part. “What about when I was a baby?”

The first time I got this question, I stalled. I thought. I was mortified at the length of time it took to conjure up the memories. Was time wiping it clean? I could easily remember the day her brother was born, why not hers? I panicked, and panic returned an answer.

“You were born on a Thursday because ‘Thursday’s child is full of grace.’ You slept in a pram for your first four months because I could easily rock you to sleep in that and I was too scared to try any other method.”

There are other memories packed away, mind. I give the impression otherwise here, but actually the first nine months or so of K’s life were heavily chronicled in a diary I kept in 2004; the details of which may, one day, be turned into a book. That was part of their original purpose, but it seems, I fear, that they need to be revisited.

How can it be that this ‘Big Four Girl’ - as we call her now - is now old enough to demand her past be summoned and celebrated? And how can it be that my memory has gone spotty at the worst possible time? All in the same week when I walked past a photo of hers taken at 20 months of age and I stopped dead, gazing at that photo I hadn’t looked at in a while and I wondered, “Where has that little baby gone?”

She is gone, but then she is not. She is inside and of the delicious creature who is now, as I write this, asleep in her bed.

I suppose this is why I blog: to take the fight of what is done and not leave it ‘done’. The past, whether we dwell on it, or our children ask us to, always abides somewhere.

For me, it’s in a drawer in one of my work filing cabinets.

Perhaps its time to dig it out again.

For her.

9 Comments on “Memoirs and the twisted tyranny of our memories”

1
Shelly
June 21st, 2008
11:43 pm

That reminds me of Jamie Lee Curtis’ book “When I was little- a four year old’s memoir of my youth”. The kids at work do it too- my four year olds always point out things they used to do when they were babies, and they don’t do them now they are big.

2
Suze
June 22nd, 2008
1:26 am

Lovely post. It’s amazing how time smudges our memories of the most important events in our lives, no matter how we try and remember….

Suze’s last blog post..A Lost Teenage Spirit

3
jeanie
June 22nd, 2008
10:29 am

Wow - is she four? Seems she has been so little for so long and then you hit us (and yourself) with a grown up 4 year old.

Four is such a great age to explore and imagine - if you can’t remember, just make it up because sure as eggs, she will!!!

jeanie’s last blog post..Things I have been Memeing to Tell You…

4
tiff
June 22nd, 2008
5:10 pm

Beautifully written.
She will aprreciate all you can give her.
My memory is not so great of a time when immy and Maddy were small but the times I remember are the most loved by the girls

tiff’s last blog post..Irony.

5
Lee
June 22nd, 2008
9:00 pm

I am amazed every single time I see your children simply because I knew Adam as a child and him as a child (not quite that young though) are my clearest impressions of him in my head. So when I see Riley I see a lot of his Dad in him.

Of course it is weird seeing a childhood friend as an adult too - he’s still taller than me grrrrrrr.

Lee’s last blog post..What I’m reading: Burning For Revenge

6
Miscellaneous-Mum
June 23rd, 2008
1:33 pm

That’s so interesting Lee. I find the same thing when I see pictures of my childhood friend’s kids. It’s a lovely feeling.

Plus - Adam’s nearly taller than anyone on the planet. So don’t feel too bad ;)

7
Gill
June 23rd, 2008
10:30 pm

A lovely post. It’s weird, I can remember quite a bit more of my eldest’s (18yo) babyhood, than I can of my 13yo’s. It worries me, because it comes across as favouritism, which it truly isn’t! I think it’s just that when my second babe was little I was so much busier - caring for her as well as her school-going sister meant that my days were very full. Either that or I was suffering from early onset memory loss LOL!

Gill’s last blog post..Happy Endings

8
Janet
June 24th, 2008
12:55 am

Last night the Queen and her Daddy were looking through photo albums of when she was a baby. We haven’t done such a good job of actually printing the photos of DeBoy, so we’d better start soon!
I played with trucks, not dolls, as well. Which is why it’s so odd that my daughter is such a GIRLY girl!

Janet’s last blog post..Let Us Be Lovers, We’ll Marry Our Fortunes Together

9
PlanningQueen
June 24th, 2008
11:04 pm

I now wish I had written more down. I thought I would remember it all, because at the time it seems so amazing that I couldn’t imagine possibly forgetting it. The trouble is they do so many amazing and wonderful things that to keep track of this x 4 is impossible!

And on of the subject of memoirs, I have tagged you for the Six Word Memoir in my scheduled post for tomorrow. Not sure if this is your thing or not, so please ignore if it is not! :)
PlanningQueen’s last blog post..10 Reasons To Look Forward To School Holidays

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