Where the Lines Between Reality and Fantasy are Blurred

It has been 13 years since I returned to my life in TN after having lived in Dallas, TX for a mere 11 months.  A week ago tomorrow, I made a return trip back to Dallas for the first time since I moved away, visiting for a week.

What is most surprising to me to me is that nothing is as I remember it.  Sure, a lot can change in 13 years but I think it is more than that …

My move to Dallas represents only the second most important decision I have ever made thinking solely of my path, the first being my decision to attend college.

Since being back in TN over the past 13 years, I have often wondered if I made the right decision at the right time to move back. Sure, given Ma’s deteriorating health conditions, I would have moved back eventually but did I move back too soon?  This wondering, and perhaps regret, eventually developed into endearing memories of what my life in Dallas was like.  Granted, my time there was enjoyable but as I re-explored the sites this week and revisited some points with fond memories attached, I realize that nothing is as I remember it.

There are a few explanations for this I suppose ..

Granted, a lot can admittedly change in 13 years especially in an urban environment.  I didn’t even recognize my old office building given the new buildings that have risen around it so yeah, a lot has changed … but that’s not it …

Then, there is the phenomenon of false memories.  I recently had a conversation with a very dear friend of mine about general life events – a where were you when sort of conversation.  We began to speak of the Challenger explosion.  My memories tell me that I was in Ms. Palladino’s high school art class when we watched the news on the TV mounted in the front of the classroom.  I remember we got those TVs as part of a grant to support the viewing of the Channel 1 News station for current events framed for adolescents.  I also remembering sitting in the front row nearly in front of the TV as we watched the footage of the explosion.  She recounted similar memories but while she is only a couple of years my senior, her memories seemed to coincide with a much earlier age than mine.  So, we googled the event.  The Challenger exploded on January 18th, 1986 … given that I was born in ’78, that would have made me 8 years old – certainly not a high school student.  This is a perfect example of how our memories can distort a past reality.  How we can force ourselves to believe very specific and detailed events that never happened.  So I have to wonder, have my feelings of regret around Dallas somehow shaped my memories of my time there?

Finally, our cumulative experience defines our current experience … not only am I 13 years older, I have also acquired 2 master degrees, advanced in a new career, supported 2 teenage boys through high school … you get the picture.  Basically, most of what I experienced in 2002/03 were new experiences for me then and so left an impression that I carried with me all these years.  The impression was based more on the excitement surrounding a new experience and less about the experience itself.  Fast forward to 2016 – lots of other experiences now define the things/events/places I attempted to re-experience while in Dallas but it just wasn’t the same – because I am not the same and I no longer see/experience things the way I did when I was 24.

I guess I think through all of this to convince myself that no matter what, life is what you make of it and never what you remember of it.

2 Years Now

It has been two short years since you and Justin tied the knot.

It is surreal for me – for a couple of reasons.

First – you are, and always will be, my baby girl.  Acknowledging then that you are all grown up is not something I easily do.

Second – my memories of this day two years ago are very different than yours. I wasn’t able to join in your celebration with you.  Rather, I was trying to distract Ma from the pain of not being present – a pain I am not so sure she ever let go of.  Her body would not allow her to attend and her mind kept her from healing from that.

I believe that her inability to be physically present, on a day that she herself had been looking forward to, was a turning point for her recovery.  It was at that point, that I believe, she realized that her life was slowly being consumed by the dis-ease of her physical body.  She had fought for so long but now it was clear that even she was not strong enough.

I never heard her speak of your day except for once – when she owned that that hardest part of it all was knowing that Marlene was able to attend.

I hope you know how proud of you she was.  I also hope you can see through her life how anger and resentment can eat away at the very fiber of your soul.  If I could wish for you anything at all, it would be the ability to forgive even when you can’t forget.