I'm frequently teased for failing to recall names, faces, places and sometimes
even the simplest words.
I'm not sure if it's a matter of selective memory, an age-old issue with
near-sightedness or something else entirely, but I never seem to recall things
the way other people do.
I remember arriving home one afternoon after a happy day of play. I was
five-years-old. I had spent hours with a girlfriend. When my mother inquired
who I was playing with, I couldn't remember her name. What I did recall
was what was apparently relevant to me.
"Ah…you know. I was playing with
that nice girl who lives in the apartment on Ridge Road." Even then I was
beginning a long pattern of finding ways to move the subject matter from first
names to the kindness of others.
Most people blame fading memory on advancing age, but I've always had
difficulty. I once made an introduction of my husband, referring to him as John. It would have been a mannerly
gesture… had I remembered that my husband's name is Jimmy!
Luckily for Jimmy, he's got a fabulous sense of humor and is well acquainted
with his often daffy wife. Not missing a beat, Jimmy extended his hand to
shake with the new acquaintance.
"Hi, I'm Jim Sweeney. John is Maura’s other husband."
Over time, Jimmy merely understood my malady. He’d always find a kind way to
walk up to someone with whom I was speaking and put out his hand in personal
introduction. He knew I had an 80 – 90% likelihood of having no idea of the
name of the person I was talking to.
Our daughter caught on quite early to this name recall disability. Nearly
always in tow, she’d often accompany me in public when we’d encounter otherwise
familiar and pleasant faces.
I knew these people, yet somehow, their names would escape me. Sincerely interested, I would cringe at the
thought my secret would be disclosed and their feelings would be wounded. Kaley
would silently observe me employing all kinds of clever verbiage and creative
greeting techniques to avoid referencing people by name.
Whether I fooled others during the exchanges, I don’t know. Perhaps my
enthusiasm and genuine interest in their lives caused them to overlook the
rather obvious. Yet my social amnesia wasn’t completely overlooked.
“You didn’t remember her name, did you?” my eight-year-old would ask,
matter-of-factly.
“Was it that obvious?” I’d ask, deflated.
Only yesterday morning as I filled in for our third host on our State
of Happiness radio talk show, my co-host Diane Kutz watched me scribble
names before the show began.
"What are you doing?"
"Writing down our names.”
She smiled. "I can see you're writing my name and Brenda's . . . but
why are you also writing your own?"
I laughed hysterically, yet I was perfectly serious. "Diane, there’s a
chance I could get on the air and introduce myself as you!"
I’d alternately lament and obsess over this decades-long illness. It bears
no medically sanctioned name and offers no magic pill to correct.
Yet oddly and rather conversely, I can see that I do remember. It’s just
that I choose to remember people in different ways with an apparently different
form of recall.
I could always pull up the most random, miniscule and even cryptic details
of peoples’ lives. The same individuals (who may or may not have realized I
couldn’t recall their first names) have often been stupefied by some of my
recollections.
“Maura, I can’t believe you remembered that!” they’d marvel.
Yet I would. I could play back for them amazing details of their lives that
spoke of their interests, dreams, personal stories of pride, conquest, love,
etc. Sometimes, these marvelous memories included details they’d forgotten
about themselves!
Those kinds of memories have always spoken to me. I have always loved to remember
other people’s happy thoughts. I’d store them in my own heart and incorporate
them into a personal treasure chest of good news stories that, once prompted,
could be easily and fully retrieved.
Most people would not understand what it's been like to live inside my head.
I'm alternately wise and zany, thoughtful and scatterbrained. Whether its
people I've known, companies I've worked for or places I've visited, they often
seem to vaporize into my very dreamlike, yet highly thoughtful, mind.
Which brings me to my question: How do you remember things, people, events, or
just about anything else?
While there is much I don't remember, there is quite a bit that I do. I
remember things through the lens of Kindness. That's right - Kindness.
Here are some of those memories built on Kindness…
I remember all the strangers who have helped me find my way. Frequently lost
or directionally challenged as I like to say, I've had perfect strangers direct
me through cities like Sarasota, Florida and New York City and
distant places like Rome, Italy and Buenos
Aires, Argentina.
I remember fellow dance students at my St. Petersburg College
classes who walked me, endlessly, through routines I either didn't understand
or couldn't physically apply.
I remember Cheryl who, though a stranger at the time, shared her limited clothes
with me when my own scrubs didn’t arrive during our medical missions trip to Honduras.
There are classmates I’d only years later learn were drug dependant who, though
never sharing classes with me, would smile during homeroom or whisper hello
passing in our high school hallways. Kindness.
And, though I haven’t seen him in decades, I once remember a cousin who pulling
me up out of the water and into his motorboat. In very gentlemanly manner, he
overlooked the noticeable wardrobe malfunction that followed after my swimsuit
strap had broken during a water skiing spill. What Kindness.
We choose to save memories in many and diverse ways. Though I’d never
planned it, I now look in my rearview mirror and recognize that my memories are
housed under a single file: Kindness.
I may not share a memory bank that’s typical of others.
But the manner in which I do store memories apparently keeps me happy.
I am likely forget your name. I’ll probably fail to memorize your face or even
the manner in which we met.
I do hope you’ll overlook the apparent, yet unintended, oversight.
Yet chances are good that I’ll remember your Kindness.
As I recall life by kernels of Kindness, may you find some equally wonderful
– and happy - way to store memories of your own!
Maura is an International Speaker on Self Leadership and Emotional Intelligence
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