Kent Pitman

Kent Pitman
Location
New England, USA
Title
Philosopher, Technologist, Writer
Bio
I've been using the net in various roles—technical, social, and political—for the last 30 years. I'm disappointed that most forums don't pay for good writing and I'm ever in search of forums that do. (I've not seen any Tippem money, that's for sure.) And I worry some that our posting here for free could one day put paid writers in Closed Salon out of work. See my personal home page for more about me.

MY RECENT POSTS

OCTOBER 7, 2008 11:35PM

The URLs of the Mind

Rate: 12 Flag

I moved a lot growing up,
so I didn't like throwing things away.
I liked collecting things—until finally
they made things stamped “COLLECTIBLE.”
The day of collecting was past.

I still collected things, but
I came to seize those days where
I caught myself throwing something out
that I hadn't expected to.
Dropping everything,
I'd furiously rush to throw away more,
before the packratishness returned.

Some things I couldn't get rid of, though.
They were reminders of times past,
pointers into a tangled web of human memory,
the URLs of the mind.

To lose them would be to lose the memory,
or perhaps just to lose the opportunity
to accidentally click through—
revisiting times past.


It's why we're all so confused when someone dies.

Their things seemed so important the day before.
Now we want to treat them reverently,
but we can't.
There's nothing left to access.

The value was within the person,
a human being,
human experiences.
Once open for service,
now finally closed forever to visitors.

These artifacts of experience
performed their function
only for the one (or the few) who participated
in the memory's creation,
and to whom it had been entrusted.

Gone the site of our memory,
the possessions we amass
are but 404 URLs.


Packrat that I am,
it's sometimes been
that I could let the thing go,
keeping just the picture.
A tinyurl.

So after traveling on business for years,
I felt sure that I was destined
to open up a little shop
to sell all those little hotel soaps
and little hotel shampoos.

I finally had to let go of that idea.
They were taking up too much space!
But first, I took a snapshot
to remember.

Table full of hotel soaps and shampoos

Such images,
though sometimes art themselves,
as keys are ephemeral.

Only I
have the password
to the protected site
where the memory lingers.


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Comments

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You make me think about the nighty that I sleep in sometimes that belonged to my mom when she died eight years ago. I wish it still smelled like her.
Thank you, Kent!

Suzanne, I have things from my mom as well. A comfort...

rated
This resonates with me. For one thing, we had all of those little hotel somes, or a collection quite similar. (Maybe there will be hotel soap collectors conventions.) I become nostalgic over clothing, but in recent years, I have found that if I take a picture of each of the t-shirts I got for running some race somewhere, then I can preserve the memory but let go of the shirt (that I'll never wear again anyway). It has worked for me.

Part of the reason I say "I don't have things; my things have me." is in order to break the "collecting" cycle.

Nice, wistful poem.
Thanks for the supportive words, folks.

Rich, I have the t-shirt photos, too. Interesting that you thought of that as well.

By the way, I had to resist the urge to "go meta" and tie this into the ecological problems the planet has. All that plastic compounded. Images of the outstanding movie Wall-E come into my mind...
I like this. It strikes unexpected chords with me.
Rob, yeah, it's funny to say as the author, but it was like that for me, too. I sometimes feel like pieces write themselves and I stand outside and let it do so. I actually had set out to try to write a caption for the picture, and in the end the text only peripherally relates to the picture because the text took on a life of its own and made the picture seem almost incidental and out of place. And yet, that's the nature of all memories. The events and things that are the genesis of all our most abstract ideas are so concrete and gritty when seen up close, you wouldn't even recognize them. The things are reality and so are unable to transcend it. But fortunately we get past that.
Kent, Thanks for this post! You articulate so eloquently the desire to hold onto things.......almost projecting animus.
Well done!
:) you sound like my mom and I- wonder if it is a common dependent ailment?
Found this by following a link you left at another blog. It's lovely. Not sure my poor sad heart can take more loveliness tonight. But I'm glad to have found this. Thank you.
This rang many, many bells for me...especially right now. Thank you.