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Olēka (n). the awareness of how few days are memorable (Source: Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows)
I
did a mental exercise a few days ago: I noted down the days in 2015 that I
truly remember—whether the day was happy, awful, worrisome, or exciting. A few
stuck out for me: my first literary publication, going to Disney World, my
first day at a new school, the day my online magazine went live, the day I fell
ill right before my finals. It was a laborious, mentally exhausting practice,
but I managed to come up with seventy-four days I could remember with complete
clarity (and if not the entire day, then substantial bits of it). That seemed
fairly impressive, until I realized that there were 291 days I couldn’t recall.
Those seventy-four days had helped shape me to be the person I am now; they
were times I dealt with failure, or made a new friend, or developed a new interest.
And that’s why I remember them. But… what about the other days? Did I just wake
up, eat, study, write a bit, and go back to sleep—just to enter another day of
monotony? Was that how I spent a
majority of 2015?
Remembering
the memorable days in 2014 was even harder. After several hours of intense
soul-searching, I landed on around forty days I could recollect. Naturally, the
numbers went down as I went backwards in time… but it was a bit dispiriting all
the same. Even more daunting? The realization that five years from now, this
day may come under the “forever forgotten” category. My movements right now,
the emotions I’m experiencing, the conversation I’m making, the thoughts
flowing through my mind may all lay discarded in a neglected part of my memory.
It might be as if these moments never existed—because I can’t remember them,
and because they seem to play an inconsequential part in my life.
That’s
when I realized how precious diaries are. While rummaging through an
overflowing drawer, I found my third-grade diary—prettily wrapped in pink paper
and written in with glittering green ink. I had found it sometime in March
2016; but I got to reading it only a few days ago. Before reading the diary, I
could only recall around ten days of third grade—such as my birthday, a
particularly enjoyable music class… But after
reading it, I realized that in a hidden corner of my mind, there is a trove
of memories I haven’t pulled out in years. While my eyes absorbed the sight of
my loopy, untidy handwriting, my mind went back to the third-grade plays, the
flute recitals, the surprise spelling tests, and the “unforgettable” field
trips. Funnily enough, at the end of one entry, I had written “I will never,
ever forget this amazing day”. It’s a bit sad to know that I forgot it so
swiftly, and didn’t pay it a fifth thought until then.
We
believe that most of our days are unremarkable; but it’s only because we can’t remember them. Our minds are limited in
the amount of information they can hold. When we’re in the “now”, we’re
constantly inundated by a flurry of information that prevents us from grasping
the reality of things. We’re able to process our days mostly in retrospect; for
instance, I don’t think about the party while
I’m at the party. I think about it and create memories once I’m back home,
in the comfort of my pajamas. But it’s difficult to recount every event… The
best we can do is take the most dramatic or interesting times, and try to
extract as much sense out of them as we can. And consequently, a majority of
our days falls into the pit of oblivion.
Diaries
are powerful objects. They help me reach out to memories I didn’t even know
existed. It’s like digging through the soil and finding a sparkling stream at
the nadir—rather than the mental block you had expected. In fact, I’d like to
share an excerpt from one entry:
I don’t know why my teacher
wants me to write a diary. It’s some sort of school project, I guess. But daddy
said that it will be important to me when I grow up. He said it will make me
happy when I’m older, and will help me remember stuff. But what do I need to
remember? I remember everything that happens in my life! […]
I
found this part rather amusing. But I’m so glad that I overrode me initial misgivings,
and continued to chronicle my very uneventful days. Because… that’s what makes
them memorable. That’s how we avoid ruminating
about our lack of memorable days. Yes, most of the days we live are spent
eating or talking or studying; but they’re given a different dimension when we
write them down, and record the thoughts that ran through our head when we were
doing the most mundane activities.
I
wish I had recorded those 291 days in 2015, and the “forgettable” days in the
previous years. Because, well, that way I wouldn’t have that dull sense of
regret when I think about the number of days that slipped through my mind.
But
a part of me still wonders if every day
is meant to be memorable. After all, we can’t remember every meal we eat, every
excursion we take, and every new person we meet; we mostly remember the times that
were especially important to us. And somehow, doesn’t the uniformity of our
other days make those important times all the more special? They automatically
become diamonds in the rough. It’s easy to find and appreciate a glistening
ruby amid a vast expanse of dirt; but what if that ruby is surrounded by other
glimmering gems? How precious would that ruby be then?
Olēka:
the awareness of how few days are memorable. The awareness may be upsetting to
some, or inspiring to others. For me, it’s a mix of the two emotions; but now,
I’m trying to make it more of the latter. Yes, I treat my old diary like the
crown jewels—but it’s not always possible to keep a handwritten, hard-bound
diary once we get busier. And so, I treat those few memorable days like
cherished gifts—as remembrances of times that shaped my present personality,
rare but memorable.
Love it!
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