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Hello and welcome to my blog, this is where I shall be sharing with you whatever it is that I would like to share, mostly it will be stories/poems/things I have written, but could be book reviews, book hauls, any sort of thing like that, could also be a daily update from myself.

-Craig

Monday, 23 December 2013

23/12/2013 part 2 'Remembering Things'

Hello, me again, with another post, the last post of the day today

The following piece of writing was inspired by Neil Gaiman's tribute to Ray Bradbury, which can be read by following a link in my previous post or using the one in this post.

If you've not read the previous post, I would recommend doing so, as it sort of explains the premise and the background to this piece of writing

-Craig

                                                        *****

Remembering things is something we become proficient in at an early age, from the day we are born we are needed to remember things, nothing that concerns us in particular, but the things that become second nature when we grow older, the eating, the toiletry needs, the safety mechanisms, all of those things, as said, when we grow older, those things become second nature to us and we can free up a memory slot in our brains for new things as those become autonomous.
As we grow older, however, we need to use up these memory banks, for new things, words, names, colours, all of the things we learn from our parents and the things we learn in the most basic education forms, nursery, kindergarten, and those relevant to over worldly countries, to which the aforementioned do not apply. As we progress through the varying education systems, more and more things are added to list of autonomy, writing, speaking, drawing, or for those of the other inclination, music and science, we remember our closest friends names, and the names of those teachers that we like, and often the ones that we don’t.
Although, as we do grow older and older, there are new things to remember, and those that do not become autonomous are most often forgotten, tell me, when was the last time you used algebraic formulae outside of a maths lesson, unless you're a maths teacher, in which case, tell me when was that last time you wrote a short story or critiqued a piece of writing within an English room, we often forget things, when we stop doing them over long periods of time.
With this sudden new found idea of forgetting things often comes the forgetting of people, people whom you may have not spoken to in a couple of years, or have lost contact with, for one reason or another and with that, essentially, an identity is lost, at least, to those who have forgotten the person, whether a lost friend or, a celebrity that has died, and his work lost to those who were aware of him.
People, most often celebrities, think that they will get to live forever, or at least, their name and their work will get to live forever, the sad part being, this isn’t necessarily the case, sure, people may live on for hundreds and hundreds of years, through their works, although eventually, all the people who have either studied him in lesson, or read his or her work in their own time, will have passed on themselves, without helping future generations discover that well known person, and they will pass into the long passage of time, and be forgotten.
In this sense, it can be said, and people do say, that we die twice, once in a physical state, where people come to mourn, and remember how well your life was, and the good times you’d had, but then, as time passes on, you die again, in a mental state, where memories are often lived too many times, and pressed to the backs of minds, to not be seen again.
It’s often just the nature and the passage of time, that draws out the memories and the identity of the person in question, if people think too dearly, and too in depth about this, it could get them worried that they won’t live on, long enough to be remembered, which for some, may be the case, although more often or not, they will live on, perhaps not as long as some, although their family, will keep remembering, and keep telling future generations of the wonderful things you have done, which is true for each and every one of us.

If you think someone is worth remembering, and worth other people remembering, pass their name, or their work, if they’re the person who has written, or sung, or played on, or have drawn something, just, pass it on to your friends and maybe, just maybe, they'll live for that little bit longer.   

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