The Unbearable Lightness of Memory

I have only a handful of photographs of my father. One taken shortly after I was born shows a man, already old, wearing what looks inexplicably like a North Korean army hat cocked at a ridiculous angle on his head, wearing the weary eyes of someone who doesn’t want to be photographed and holding a massive fish in one hand. It’s winter in the photo, and a cat, little more than a kitten, stares up at the man and fish with a look that suggests the confusion of someone who can’t decide what he loves more.

Another photograph comes from his life before my family. In it, a younger man in a startlingly white T-shirt stands, cigarette in hand, with his arm around the woman I assume was his first wife. I never knew her and we never discussed her in a sober word in my home.

I remember other photos: my dad with his always-crooked glasses and the thinning but unruly hair I’ve inherited, giving me a bath when I was an infant, a scene at a family wedding I don’t remember where my parents showed the seething hostility that characterized much of their lives together while my sister and I, unaware, smiled for the person taking the picture. And, of course, his high school picture that reminds me so much of myself, as much for our shared facial features as the striking absence of confidence in our eyes.

In place of photographs, I have a scattered set of disconnected, fleeting images that are probably both real and constructed, some from whole cloth and others from the combination of events that have been distilled into the singular, cohesive narratives we also perhaps must impose on the past to give it meaning.

Some moments, though, are certain:

  • the night at the dinner table, with the yellow Lazy Susan wobbling wildly when I announced that I would tell my parents which of them I loved more—and that it was my father who stopped me.
  • the smell of the bar he managed in the morning when he was “swamping” it, disinfecting a night of manic energy, loves lost and initiated, and the regrettable choices that so often characterize dive bars. To this day, I can’t walk past a certain kind of bar late at night or early in the morning without immediately being reminded of those mornings with my dad.
  • how moved I was by the singing of the woman who sang at his funeral, who, despite the bitter cold of a December day that made me wonder whether the undertakers could break the frozen earth to bury him, was wearing the kind of thin, simple dress that seems like it’s only ever worn by evangelicals. 

There are more, of course. Thousands of flashes of memory, some that I can call at will and others that surprise me with their unexplained appearances. The story of my father isn’t cataloged anywhere but in the memory of those of us who knew him, and that story of a man who loved two families, who served in the US Army in Japan, who gave up a series of dreams for the sake of others, and who killed more than a few of his own, will continue only as long as an increasingly small number of people keep it alive.

How different from those of us alive today, who note every detail of our lives in online presences that will endure long past us, neatly sorted by date, the friends we shared them with, and how many stars we gave the experience. While I only have a few handwritten notes and shakily underlined passages to reveal which passages in his Bible moved my father, my online profile has collected the passages I love and even periodically reminds me of those I’ve forgotten. We’re not just building support for our own memories but constructing identities that not only define us but that will tell people in the future where we traveled, what we ate after photographing it, and who we loved—and when that love ended.

As much as I wish I knew more of those details about my father and could scroll through the Facebook wall of his life for clues about the man he was, I’m not sure that such an identity would be any more authentic than the fragments I cling to. When we build our lives online, we don’t actually tell our autobiographies. We’re more like curators of our own lived experience, selecting the showcase exhibits for prominent, public display and hiding some of the most authentic moments, moments of fear and confusion, doubt and pain, away from view. We’re surprisingly intimate with those in our online orbit but rarely vulnerable.

To borrow from Fitzgerald, we are not constructing the Platonic conception of ourselves but curating a life to appear like it. I’m just not sure that any of us are ready for the shock of facing the disconnect between our lived lives and the online simulacrums we piece together.

And while I do want to capture as much of the experience of travel as I can, I worry that the packaged memories I’m creating will slowly replace the moments I couldn’t put down in words or on film. On this trip, I’ve watched people race through the most majestic buildings I’ve ever seen, furiously clicking their cameras in a desperate effort to possess the memory of a place without ever once, even for an instant, truly seeing the space they were trying to lock away forever in a digital image. When they get home, I fear some will have an exhausting collection of photographs taken in the best light and from the perfect angle or an endless series of selfies taken in front of incredible backdrops but missing the awe that just inhabiting a place can give us for just a moment.

I love taking photographs and sharing them with people, either perhaps to inspire them to visit a place I’ve loved or to give them a chance to see a place they may never see. I cherish my shoeboxes of old printed, candid photographs, with their lightly acrid smell and misplaced thumbprints because they can spark a memory or teach me something new about a person I know. I’m just less certain about the effort to construct a past in the present, with our staged photographs and effort to depict our experiences in neatly packaged amuse bouches designed to score the most likes.

As I travel across Europe for this adventure, I’ve been cataloging moments: the best pictures my humble camera and questionable eye can capture, the pithiest observations about the cities I visit, and the messages that try to encapsulate what I’m living. While none of those things are dishonest, they’re not entirely accurate because they can’t capture the whole of the experience, the frustration that accompanied finding the best route to the top of Bergen, the unexpected joy of my heart swelling with wonder and hope under a huge moon in Prague, or even the comedy of the disregard for clothes shown by German pilgrims at my hostel in Pamplona. 

In the same way, I trust that I won’t lose those memories, even if their context and even my ability to deliberately recall them may slip over time, I need to trust a bit more than the other moments can live in my mind without making it to an SD card or an online profile. The goal, it seems to me, is to create our lives by living them, not to package them for presentation, either for ourselves or others who might be watching.

I’m glad I own those few photographs of my father, and I wish I had more. They provide comfort when I miss him and context for the memories slipping more each year he’s been gone. I’m even gladder for the jumble of images and memories of him that are only my own, unthreatened by the objectivity of film or a precisely recorded phrase he once thought. And as glad as I am to have the ability to record some of this experience of eleven countries in 80 days, I’m maybe even happier that some of them, messy and incomplete as they may be, will not have been captured by the camera hanging around my neck, just as I occasionally rejoice in those subjective fragments of the memory of my father’s love.