Based on an entry from my journal, dated June 20. Censored, of course, and greatly expanded (because I can type more before losing interest than I can write).
I think there exists in the human condition--or at least in my condition--a longing for something like a heroin addiction. A severe mental illness. An abusive parent. Something to unify the events of life, to give them a theme. Something to blame for all the unhappiness.
I have a guardedness to me that perceptive people notice very quickly. Maybe not perceptive people. Unfiltered extroverts--the sort of people who fling very personal things at me. They notice that these things hit a wall. A more substantial wall, it seems, than the one everyone has.
An online aura test (ha!) said I have a "red overlay," a sort of psychic shield that is developed in response to childhood trauma. To my knowledge, I have no such trauma, but I want to believe that I do. So I wonder if I have repressed memories.
I do have one potentially traumatic memory. I was on a floatation device on the lake where some family friends have a house, out deeper than I could touch with my dad and some other adults. This when I was very young, and unable to swim. At some point I rolled over and fell off my raft, and I have a sharp memory of the black of being underwater. The next thing I remember is being back on the couch in the lake house, and I have a vague sense that my dad rescued me from the water.
Holy crap, right? Except for one thing: neither of my parents has any memory of this event. This rules out any dramatic rescue or loss of consciousness, because that wouldn't be easily forgotten; Mom does remember, quite clearly, the time I fell out of a shopping cart directly onto my head. (As smart as I am anyway, I can only assume that if she had not allowed me to stand up in the cart, I would have a nobel prize by now.) I can think of three possibilities, then, for what really happened.
1. It never happened, and this memory is the product of mis-remembered fragments and possibly invention.
2. I dreamed it and forgot it was a dream.
3. The event in question did happen, but I was only in the water for a split second before Dad snatched me out. I don't remember the next few minutes because it was forever ago, and my parents don't remember the event at all because there was never enough danger for it to make a lasting impression. To little land-lubber me, though, it was genuinely traumatic.
I'll likely never know. Interesting how memory works... or how it doesn't.
Mom says I used to suffer from night terrors; that I would be sitting in bed screaming and she couldn't wake me up. I have no memory of this, but I do remember some terrifying dreams. In one, a highly dramatic twist on a real event, a bull had gotten loose and made its way into a small room, where I was stuck with it.
I also had a recurring dream with variations of the following: My parents would be having a party with twenty or more adult friends, all milling around in the dimly lit first floor of our Third Street house. I would be sent upstairs to bed, but in the upstairs hallway I would encounter a large crocodile. This crocodile had an extremely long tongue (I always remember it as a "twenty foot tongue," though I don't recall ever measuring), which could snake about with great dexterity and would instantly kill anyone it touched. This was just knowledge I had; I always woke before the dreaded tongue came out. Until one night--and I think this only happened once--when the crocodile broke the rules of the dream and appeared downstairs, where it shot its tongue out and killed several people before hitting me. I fell, feeling myself die, and then woke up.
Every night of my childhood I went to bed terrified that I would have this dream. During my bedtime prayers I begged God to give me no dreams, so afraid was I of nightmares. I worried that if I prayed for "good dreams," God might send me dreams that had scary moments but resolved happily, and I knew that the scary moments would nonetheless leave me lying in bed, afraid to close my eyes, unable to go to sleep until I had woken my mom (knowing she was awake made me feel safe enough to fall asleep). And that I would remember those scary moments just when bedtime came around the following night.
I sometimes wonder if such fervent determination not to dream is to blame for the rarity of remembered dreams today.
Perhaps I have my trauma, after all.
2 comments:
I enjoy your blog, Nick. It elicits many memories in my own mind. Grayson is going through night terrors and they are also odd and overwhelming for parents who try and try to wake their little ones up. But, more than that, I am fascinated by the ideas you raise about memory, about what is real and what isn't, and what happens when the inner landscape is more "true" to us than the outer world. Your internal (and then external processing as you write) is helpful for us introverts too...
I'm so glad you're reading! But yeah, memory interests me... and how commonly it's misunderstood. Most people (and, shall I add, the legal system) assume that memory is more or less a tape in your head that you can rewind at will to replay moments, but it's really much more dynamic than that.
And I like processing :)
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