Sunday was the five-year anniversary of this here blob, which I've neglected in the past months in the interest of Rookie,
high school, friends, sleep, and other things. Aside from that, I don't
feel like I have much to say, or rather, I prefer now to say it in
private. My most recent journal is my favorite thing I've ever made, and
nobody will ever see it.
I have been thinking a lot lately about what validates an emotion/event/observation, makes me feel like it really happened and I really lived
it, and this seems like the right occasion to word-vomit these ideas.
(Plus, I miss having time to keep this thing going, and I do feel an
obligation to people who have read my blog for a long time that is not
unlike the unspoken understanding you have with your first best friend,
the one who watched you like stupid bands and stupid people and
embarrass yourself and cry a lot, whose insight into whatever you do
from now on is shaped by a unique knowledge of all the ties which bind
New You to Old You, and who refrains from bringing up in front of new
acquaintances that time you were on the 8th grade hip-hop team in the
interest of letting you become more of yourself. In other words, we had a time, but there's so much time ahead, and it is, somehow, at the same time, quickly running out.)
I. The school year begins, ending a very special summer. I begin breaking down the different kinds of memories I have:
1. IMAGINED
"The difference between reality and imagination wasn't ever clear to me at all." —David Lynch
"Everything you can imagine is real." —Pablo Picasso
Where do these episodes come from? A past life? An innate discontentment
with everything life already offers, combined with a form of voluntary
synesthesia developed from an adolescence of perpetual loneliness
manifesting itself in movie marathons and an inconvenient impulse to pay
attention to every visual and auditory detail of every situation as an
escape from the social interaction at hand?
An argument for the past-life theory might include this anecdote: A
drawing I did in my journal of how I remembered the backyard of my
boyfriend's house looking on a night that it was snowy and dark included
a metal swingset. The next time I went over there, I realized I'd only
imagined the swingset, though he later told me that they did have one
when he was little. My mom then told me that our family almost bought
that same house before I was born, meaning that, in that timeline, I would have known that metal swingset, in that backyard.
References: Zoltan Torey copes with blindness by reconstructing reality in his head. Wes Anderson called Moonrise Kingdom a "memory of a fantasy," and envisioned the whole "These Days" scene from The Royal Tenenbaums
when he first heard the song, building the rest of the movie around
that moment (I have no source for this, a friend told me, I'll choose to
believe it's true). I also wrote a bit about this in relation to The Virgin Suicides here.
2. DREAMS
Unlike imagined memories, dreams are not witnessed or crafted by the conscious brain (then again, "WHAT'S CONSCIOUS, MAN?" —the tiny stoner living inside me who mocks my every semi-deep
thought). I account for dreams as real memories, or at least truthful
ones, because of the idea that in dreams come truths that are too
difficult for the conscious mind to accept.
If a dream is not considered as valid as "real," conscious memory, then
I'll still regard it in some corner of the mind as a tiny piece of my
history and identity. In Chris Ware's Building Stories, one
character is able to partially reconcile her life's regret of neglecting
to pursue a creative career because she dreams she had written the book
she'd always hoped to. The fact that this book could exist even in her
subconscious fantasy was enough for her. Just the notion of her own potential had her wake up in tears.
References: Agent Cooper's dreams in Twin Peaks. Jenny Zhang's wonderful piece for Rookie. Joseph Cornell's dream diary. Robert Altman's 3 Women, which came
to him in a dream (the casting, the colors, the story, everything) and
was shot without a script, with only his memory as a guideline.
3. SECONDHAND
"The world is bound with secret knots." —Athanasius Kircher
Secondhand memories come from storytelling — a movie, a book, a song, or a person recalling an event of their own past.
When I saw Ware give a talk about his book last November, he said that
he could remember what he'd visualized as a child listening to his
grandmother tell stories about her own life better than he could picture
some events that actually happened to him. When I interviewed him for Rookie, I asked about the one character's dream, why he included that Picasso quotation on the inside cover, what convinced him that such memories could have the same effect on a person as real ones. His response:
"Well, really, our memories are all we have, and even those we think of as "real" are made up. Art can condense experience into something greater than reality, and it can also give us permission to do or think certain things that otherwise we’ve avoided or felt ashamed of. The imagination is where reality lives; it’s the instant lie of backwash from the prow of that boat that we think of as cutting the present moment, everything following it becoming less and less "factual" but no less real than what we think of as having actually occurred."
When I remember eighth grade, I recall scenes my mind illustrated while reading Norwegian Wood, just as well as, and in some cases more vividly than, classmate interactions and walks to school. I spent a lot of freshman year analyzing my close, personal relationships with Rayanne Graff and Laura Palmer. I cried when I had watched The Virgin Suicides
so many times that I could no longer remember how I'd first visualized
the book. I still miss the characters I'd pictured before, and the
school, too. Strangely enough, my first mental images of the Lisbons'
house came flooding back to me when I set foot inside a neighbor's for a
wake a couple years ago. When I walked outside, I saw that across the
street was an old brown Cadillac surrounded by bushes and a sunset,
mimicking two Corinne Day photos from the set of The Virgin Suicides almost exactly.
I don't actually think these events really happened to me,
but they'll still come to mind when I think back on a time when a
secondhand event seemed to hold some kind of truth that reality did not.
Example: I felt all weird and drifty at the beginning of last summer,
and when I try and revisit that place, I don't literally imagine the
view from behind a car windshield and how everything must look to the
narrator in Yo La Tengo's "Today Is the Day," but I sure remember the exact sadness that it captured.
References: Ronald Reagan, long before he had Alzheimers, would
repeatedly recall some great war story with tears in his eyes. As it
turned out, the incident was actually from a 1944 film called A Wing and a Prayer. Every other part of the Oliver Sacks essay where I learned this is also amazing and relevant.
4. EMBARRASSMENTS
These memories worsen with time. The original events often occur in
adolescence, are usually social interactions, and, at worst, were
intended to be romantic. One remedy is to frequently remind yourself
that you won't have to live with your humiliation forever because
MORTALITY. Or that our perception of reality is pretty inaccurate no
matter what (see: Chris Ware; the tiny stoner I quoted earlier). Or that
technically — TECHNICALLY — we have no way of knowing for sure that any of this is happening AT ALL. You could also just watch Freaks and Geeks.
5. NOSTALGIA
This is when the act of remembering an event becomes more enjoyable than
the event itself, conjuring feelings that are warm and fuzzy, but also painful in the best way. From what I've gathered, the majority of people feel nostalgia most strongly for:
(a) Adolescence. Not for all the sweaty, horrible stuff mentioned
in #4, but for the positive feelings and experiences which are only
accentuated by the fact that your developing brain is taking them in for
the first time. And even the sweaty, horrible stuff can be kind of
great to revel in. Or, in the words of John Hughes, "At that age, it
often feels just as good to feel bad as it does to feel good."
(b) Love.
Lolita and The Virgin Suicides combine (a) and (b) most
perfectly, both being stories of men who spend their entire adult lives
trying to hold onto what they once had, or once wanted.
References: Why You Truly Never Leave High School. Paul Feig's guest DJ choices on KCRW. Chuck Klosterman's essay on Dazed and Confused, in which he states, "Dazed and Confused is not a movie about how things were; Dazed and Confused is a movie about how things are remembered." Those fuzzy photograph-looking paintings by Gerhard Richter. Any Rodarte collection that cites California as inspiration. Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.
II. My understanding of death deepens. I think I'd always assumed
I'd at least get to watch my funeral go down and have a few suspicions
confirmed concerning who would write awkward "Happy Birthday! Miss you
:(" messages on my Facebook wall long after I'd passed. I thought I'd
get to still see how this whole "world" thing turns out: Do we all
explode? Do things start to suck less first? Does everyone get sick of
technology and start to live like the Amish, inspired by that one
episode of Arthur? DO PEOPLE STILL WATCH ARTHUR?
But a few experiences take me out of all the stupid, floaty thoughts you
get alone in your room and it hits me, quite tardily, that death is
really the end.
III. I start watching Six Feet Under, which helps in some
ways ("Why do we have to die?" "To make life important") but feeds my
anxiety in others (every episode starts with some really unfortunate
freak accident).
Everything is now a matter of life and death. Math homework: NOT A
PRIORITY WHEN THE END COULD BE RIGHT AROUND THE CORNER. Cleaning my
room: IS THIS REALLY HOW I WANT TO SPEND MY LAST HOURS ON EARTH WHEN I
COULD GET HIT BY A CAR TOMORROW? Etc. The habit that blog-keeping
instilled in me of compulsively archiving every single thing only
worsens. If I get behind in my journal, I spend hours wondering where
to even start. I can't pay attention in class, only make scattered notes
where there should be a timeline of the Industrial Revolution, listing
all the details I need to get down properly as soon as I have time: The
music we listened to in Claire's room, the old man I saw on my way to
school, the view from my boyfriend's car when we sat in a 7-Eleven
parking lot watching people walk in and trying to predict their
purchases, along with a record of what each person looked like and what
they bought. My hands tremble, relaxing only once everything has been
sufficiently documented, each memory in my grasp, as if by putting them
down on paper, I can make them last forever.
I develop my own form of sacred geometry to
find the secret knots among these details and fit them into the rest of
my journal. I go through one every two months or so, and for that
period of time, coordinate it and all other parts of my life with a
specific mood. My handwriting, my doodles, the clothes I wear, the books
I read, the music I listen to, the movies I watch, and the streets I
walk down all match up. One goal of this is to create memories that are
aesthetically pleasing and cohesive and perfect and synesthetic, each
element in place (and never repeated in another journal or memory,
making its singular usage especially special) so that the nostalgia will
feel extra good. The other is to be as many people as possible, until I'm nobody at all.
IV. I listen to the "Bliss" episode of Radiolab, and the reasoning behind my impulses feels confirmed by the segment on snowflakes.
So taken with their beauty, a young man in the 1880s named Wilson
Bentley spent day after day trying to catch and document them, first
through drawing and then photography. He only had about five minutes
before one would melt, and had to hold his breath the whole time to keep
from giving off any extra heat. Today, physics professor and snowflake
expert Kenneth Libbrecht travels worldwide to do the same.
"…All of a sudden they'll get really good, and then I just start out there, frantically trying to collect as many as I can. One of the things I like to think about is, here I am, with my little piece of cardboard, in the middle of a continent where it's snowing all the time, and so I'm catching some incredibly small number of these things for a brief period, and getting some really cool pictures. So you kind of wonder, what else is out there? What are you missing? I mean, imagine just all the beautiful little works of art that are just falling down, totally unnoticed, and then they just disappear. Stuff that is far prettier than the pictures I have. 'Cause they're out there, you know they're out there. Statistically, they're out there, so you know, there's just an awful lot of really gorgeous things, that are just totally ephemeral and you'll never see them. And they're falling constantly. You sorta wanna just stop the world and go look at them."
V. I get to the finale of Six Feet Under. One character begins
readying a camera until she's told, "You can't take a picture of this.
It's already gone."
I talk about hoarding with my neighbor, whose house is very clean and
calming, who has no trouble ridding of her two sons' childhood things.
"I don't need to keep them, because I have every memory in my heart."
I tell Claire that before, I felt like an event had only really happened
once it had been documented, shared, and praised. Then, just documented
and shared. Now, just documented. She reminds me that there are always
more moments to come, and that it will be fully experienced once I've
let go of those of the past.
I revisit American Beauty. This part at the very end leaves me feeling like Alan Ball has, once again, personally slapped me in the face.
"...It's hard to stay mad when there's so much beauty in the world. Sometimes I feel like I'm seeing it all at once, and it's too much, my heart fills up like a balloon that's about to burst...and then I remember to relax, and stop trying to hold on to it, and then it flows through me like rain and I can't feel anything but gratitude for every single moment of my stupid little life."
VI. My boyfriend and I take a tiny road trip during spring break.
We skip stones on the beach, drink Coke out of glass bottles, and watch
a pink sunset sky settle into nighttime. We walk along train tracks in
the dark and stop to look at an old car behind a restaurant. I ask him
to stand in front of it so I can take a Polaroid, the only picture I
would have of him.
I retrieve it from my bag once we're on the dull Midwestern highway,
leaving for good. The photo got exposed in the streetlight and came out
as a mess of brown and blue spots. In a panic, I rapidly replay the
day's events in my mind, and jot down a few details to remember. At some
point, my notes turn into questions that I just can't shake:
"You can't grasp your legacy when alive, and it makes no difference in
death. What if I leave behind no record? What if I let every day vanish?
If I don't archive anything, am I free to change?"
The endless gray road with its yellow lights begins to feel less like a
stretch of perpetual sameness, and more like an infinite sky filled with
stars.
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