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Fifty-nine years ago this week, I can vividly remember…
… coming home from my Grade 1 classroom at Glen Echo School, and sitting in my family’s living room in Hamilton.
I sat there on the couch beside my Mom in silence, watching black and white TV coverage on the big wood-encased console TV that sat in the corner of the room.
Together we stared at the grainy images as a shocked world responded to the death of a man I had no idea existed before that day.
But many millions of others did know him and were dream-walking in a cloudy state of distress and disbelief. It was how the adults around me reacted to this that I remember most.
Mom sat forward on the couch, elbows propped on her knees, gazing intently at the screen. There were no tears, but I knew something wasn’t right.
What little I knew about the world was different from that day forward. An explosion had occurred and the world suddenly became real to a little 6 year-old… me.
The date? November 22, 1963.
Yes, I’m… ahem… old enough to remember the day of JFK’s assassination. U.S. President John Fitzgerald Kennedy.

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Not to dismiss the deaths alluded to in Don MacLean’s classic song American Pie, my life hit its first wall of sorts on November 22, 1963, which in a way created my first window of memory, followed by a great number of other walls-and-windows-of-memory later on.
Memories are fascinating things, aren’t they?… how we experience thousands of moments each day, yet almost all hit a wall and slip quietly to the floor, never to be seen again. I typically remember very little within 24 hours without concentrated thought.
And yet…
… not everything strikes a wall and falls away.
There are also windows of memory, windows filled with remembrances that we see, feel, hear, and taste for the remainder of our lives.
Honestly, I don’t know the details of the complex brain chemistry that preferentially keeps and stores those visions that can feel “alive”, as if they happened yesterday.
I know it can all be explained by chemical elements, hormones, and synapses, still I find it a mystical part of brain magic.
With great detail, I can experience over and over the exhilarating births of each of my children, I can feel the panic of nearly drowning when I was about 7 years old and had stepped into an unexpected dropoff in a Parry Sound lake, I can hear the voice of my mother reminding me when I was 15 to apply for a McDonald’s job the night she died, I can viscerally feel the elated exhaustion as I crossed the finish line of a 1990 Ironman race.

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There are lots and lots of these vibrant memories, but they represent only a miniscule amount of the bank deposits that have been passed through my accounts.
Each of us possesses a myriad of wondrous memory “windows”… most are of great import to our lives, our formation… and strangely, a few minor episodes slip through, little escapees of the forgotten prison, for some unexplainable reason.
Walls and windows – blessings and curses, curses and blessings… are not only a part of our physical homes of comfort, but also of our inner mansion of memory comfort and discomfort.
JFK’s death was only the first of many windows constructed as I began building my lifetime home.

Nov 27, 2022 @ 11:33:04
Poignant words Larry. I too recall that moment in history like it was yesterday…followed by a similar experience with the funeral of Sir Winston Churchill….followed by the assassinations of MLK & Bobby Kennedy…followed by the FLQ crisis and the lost goes on for the tragedies that are etched into our memories. There are also the wonderful accomplishments that seer memories into our memories such as Apollo 11 landing on the moon and Neil Armstrong’s famous words about a small step for man and a giant step for mankind….the fall of the Berlin Wall….etc. Oh…and of course all of the MANY Stanley Cups won by the Habs during my lifetime…each and every one a great memory…😁
Amazing how our lives revolve around such historical events.
Peace
Jim
Nov 29, 2022 @ 08:12:08
Lots of great examples that I share with you James, both positive and negative… sadly, it takes a strong memory to bring up HABS Cup wins now (or Maple Leafs)… hopefully that dream memory will be rekindled for you before too long 😉
Nov 28, 2022 @ 04:43:09
I love the imagery of our memories as “deposits in our ‘personal’ bank accounts.”
I too remember sitting with my parents when the news broke on our BW TV.
I remember it vividly and the tense atmosphere in the sitting room where we were gathered.
You have managed to capture the essence of our passage on the train. The big issues, pleasures, hurts, life changing moments that touch us alone but also the momentous time bombs that propel us into our place in the world.
Both impact on how we feel about our time on the earth and while some memories disturb us ; its wonderful to recall happy times on our journey.
Nov 29, 2022 @ 08:13:37
Beautifully put Florence.. you are not only a talented artist with paint, but also with words! 🙂