The emptiness of the past is what most
disturbs me. I remember my childhood home from the outside: a small
low suburban house among others of its kind, surrounded by expansive,
flat, close-clipped lawns of yellowish grass, dotted with low shrubs
that we called... junipers, I think? – low, squat, dense, prickly
blots of dark green. Nothing you could explore or hide under. All
dull: all exposed and yet confined. I realize that it's subjective
fallacy, and a failure of imagination, but to this day I can't
picture a bodhisattva, or even a happy person, living in such a
neighborhood. A graveyard of hopes. It's where my parents' marriage
went to die.
When Martha and I first got together,
she tells me, the thing that most disturbed her about me – and I
was a queer enough young man, in all conscience; there were plenty of
things to choose from – was that I remembered nothing of my
childhood. I seemed to have emerged into a vague and partial
consciousness when I was eleven or twelve, and to have almost no
clear memories from any time earlier than that. Which, since I was
only seventeen when we got together, did not make much of a
remembered life. From time to time, small memories, preserved like
specimens, showed up. But compared to her riches – she seems to
remember absolutely everything, in Dickensian profusion – I was
remarkably poor. I had lived in my head, not in the world. I remember
the books I read and the pictures I saw. I remember the girls I had
crushes on. That's about it.
It was Eros that brought me to anchor
in the world, that gave me motive and memory. I really don't seem to
have existed before that, in any substantial way. I drifted
somewhere, but I don't know where. And if I contemplate a life with
the erotic fading from it, my imagination turns up the same emptiness
my early past does: a formless, uninhabited, uninhabitable flatland
of dry lawns and junipers.
It recurs to me: I need to build a
place. I need to make my house into a home, to fully inhabit it. I
have thought this before, said it before, but there is an existential
urgency to it now. The erotic may have been the only vividness my
early life provided – the bright thread to follow – but it's only
a thread, a guide out of the labyrinth. It can't make a home. The
other impulses to make and mark are only adumbrations of this first,
primary need: to make a place, a real place, one that will take the
impress of memory and give memories back in return.
I don't even know if it's possible. For
a long, long time my primary response to the houses I have lived in
has been the imperative need to secure my lines of retreat from it.
How do I get out of this place? How do I know I'm not trapped here?
How do I keep my freedom of movement? Can I, really, live in my own
house? I really don't know. Maybe I can't.
But whether I can or not, it becomes
clear to me that nothing else comes next. I either take this step
forward, or stay where I am.
13 comments:
I have very few childhood memories. But I lived in a weird old house in an interesting neighborhood.
I think some of us just forget. I forget almost everything to this day.
Yes, that may well, be: it may be a fortuitous association. Some of us may just organize our memories differently, so that we don't pull them up as vignettes. A different filing system.
I should note, too, that this supposed advent of memory coincides precisely with beginning to keep a regular journal :-)
Might as well jump.
I almost wish I could forget. But my childhood so baffled me, I held every memory as a puzzle piece that would eventually answer my innumerable questions. I'm now in the process of cutting up all the pieces to make an image that makes some sense. Recycling, reclaiming, repurposing.
Thank you for this post. Good questions.
Although I remember being 2 years old, I didn't feel fully alive and substantial until I was 17 and fell into a love that has survived death.
My home is a tiny condominium. I've been sharing a big "house" with 25+ other people since 1984. There are three 3-story buildings with 25 units each on a large piece of land that looks out to the foothills of the North Cascades.
When I moved here, I didn't intend to stay more than a year. It's taken me a long long time to feel "at home" in this place. It was supposed to be a transitional place on my way back to Northern California. Now it is a place I love dearly. The man I love died. He is part of this place now.
I could be wrong, but I don't think you have my new blog address:
http://talking37thdream.blogspot.com
My old blog address is on your "Blogs I Read"
Oh, you're right! Fixed.
(o)
The blog "Hotel Mama" also moved, you'll find it there now, Dale:
http://hotelmama.it
Thanks, got it!
Remarkable. I think I want to know more about your parents, now.
I really needed this tonight. Thanks for being a pal along the road. Your writing lifts me up because it is filled with pain and honesty. I know I've found a friend when I click on "Mole" : )
Thanks so much, Kristen. So happy that we ended up on the same block of the cyberhood! xo
I also find that great precincts of my past are absent. Also, certain things that happened repeatedly are one emblematic memory... I remember the most beautiful places I lived more clearly than the dull; I have the most gorgeous pictures in my head from Gramercy and Baton Rouge, though I was small.
Post a Comment