Friday, September 25, 2009

1971


A more conventional picture might have been a better way to start this blog, but this image says so much about why I love photos. Maybe this is the moment it began.

The thumb is mine. I was nine years old and my mother had died several months before. Life was still a bit of a blur for all of us. I knew she was gone, and I knew she'd been sick for a very long time before that, but the finality of it was hard to grasp. I thought about Mom a lot - she had been so very ill before she died that it had been a long time since I'd been able to really talk with her. That Saturday morning, I suddenly realized that I could no longer see her face in my mind. I couldn't hear her voice. I panicked. I needed to see her face - the loss of that memory would make the loss of her unbearable. The only picture of my mom I knew of was in a double hinged frame - two 5x7 church directory photos of my mom and dad - on the nightstand next to my dad's bed. So, I went to my dad and asked if I could have that picture. Possibly not understanding the depth of my 9 year old desparation, or perhaps lost in his own, he said no.

Not to be deterred, I borrowed the picture I could not have, grabbed my little camera and headed out to the backyard. In the days before scanners and quick trips to the Sam's Club photo desk, the grass and the California sun would have to do.

Years later, when the four of us were grown, my sister divided up the family photos among us and I finally have the photos of my mother that I had yearned for so many years before. Memory is a funny thing. It's fragile, prone to distortion, and imperfect, but we must have it. We surround ourselves with things that help us remember - momentos, hand-me-downs, stickynotes, keepsakes, and treasures. We don't want to forget, to let go. I think this is because we are made for connection. We long for it.
The picture above is a grainy black and white photo that is almost 39 years old. My grandmother's box of memories included tintypes, and my daughter's memory box will no doubt be a digital file folder of some description - but no matter how advanced we become, we'll hold on to our images because, more than anything else, we want to hold on to each other.

2 comments:

DJ said...

So touching, thanks for remembering & sharing. Debbie

cmaxwell said...

Your post really resonated with me. I also remember the day I panicked because I couldn't remember my mom's face anymore. That was so scary! My dad had gotten rid of all of her pictures. But I did have a note she'd written to an orderly in the hospital asking when she was going to get her meds so she could have some chocolate milk (she couldn't talk anymore at that point...and she didn't care about the meds, she was looking forward to the chocolate milk). I don't know how I got that note, but I'm glad I did. Somehow, that note served as a connection to her. I still have it, in my Bible. I feel like it represents the softer side of my mom. I didn't get to see that side much, but the note reminds me of it. I'm thankful to have that note to remind me. You're SO right...no matter how, we all want to hold on to those we love.

My Blog List

  • What a day! Our new and improved PLAN for attacking New York began at a bus stop right in front of our hotel. For under $4 per person, we were delivered wi...
  • Each year I encourage the C3 class to commit to reading the Bible through in a calendar year. Committing to daily reading of God's word greatly enriches yo...
  • We are home again. After sleeping 10 hours, I woke to find Mark in the living room watching Geronimo starring Matt Damon, filmed in Monument Valley, of...
  • 3752 miles later, we're home. The last two days of driving were a little long, but worth it. We listened to Harry Potter 4 on the way there, and Harry Pott...
Powered by Blogger.