TinyBubbles
anarchist
- MBTI
- ^.^
- Enneagram
- .
i've often heard people say that when they're old and dying, they'll want to look back on their years and remember a life well lived~ the implication being memories themselves are inherently valuable, perhaps equal in value to the experiences themselves. what do you think? when something changes in our lives, when we lose touch with certain people either through death or distance or otherwise, it's often our memories upon which we rely to help us transition through to the next phase in our life. yet, as anyone knows, a memory is not an exact recollection of an event, it, like our physical bodies, changes with time and experience. it molds to become more of what we are now, rather than what we were at the time when the memory was initially formed.
i guess what i'm asking here is, how valuable do you think these insubstantial entities we call memories truly are? would it be a great loss if we lost all our memories, or rather, our most precious ones? can the imagination fill in what the mind can no longer remember? would our experience of life be any less significant if we didn't remember as much as we do, if we could only remember a few days in the past, for example?
would love to hear your thoughts, and thanks for reading =)
i guess what i'm asking here is, how valuable do you think these insubstantial entities we call memories truly are? would it be a great loss if we lost all our memories, or rather, our most precious ones? can the imagination fill in what the mind can no longer remember? would our experience of life be any less significant if we didn't remember as much as we do, if we could only remember a few days in the past, for example?
would love to hear your thoughts, and thanks for reading =)