What We Don’t Remember
A phone call
interrupted the last few pages of Tell Me
Everything You Don’t Remember, The Stroke That Changed My Life. 237, the country code for Cameroon. I put down the book and answered. “Madame G?” came a familiar voice, half a
world away, sitting beside me on the living room couch in my absurdly hot
apartment. “Madame G,” Mr. Forbeh said,
“we are missing you over here.”
It could be years. When I look at the calendar, it has been only
two weeks since I was there, since I ran the mountains in the mornings, gazing
out across sparkling zinc roofs that dot the plain; cooked my meals on a fire
between three stones; feasted with my neighbors, bounced their babies, sweated
and stagnated and at long last erected a library with mudblocks molded between
our hands. The memories arrive in
patchwork, “modules” as Christine Hyung-Oak Lee calls them, “the structure of
story” (246). In the ever-growing fabric
between my memories is something gray, shapeless, my new life here which feels at
present like a coat ten sizes too big.
“Time is dependent on
memory,” (41) Lee tells us. Without
memory, that is, without short-term memory being converted into long-term
memory, there is no sense of chronology, and the structure of her storytelling
reflects this. “The end is the beginning
is the middle is the end” (238); Christine (the character) is recovering, she
is giving birth, she is getting divorced, she is about to have a stroke. One of the lines I find most touching in the
book is, “My forty-six-year-old friend Justin will have a massive stroke and be
taken off life support a week later and then linger as if on a precipice before
falling transitioning saying good-bye without words even though he was a poet
and words were his life he dies in silence except for the monitors like an
exclamation point” (110). Told after the
fact, told in the future tense switching to present. The juxtaposition of “his life he dies.” His life, at least the life we see, the
description we get, is a single sentence, ending in a figurative exclamation
point. “And what is left of him are
memories,” Lee writes. “And I know that
memories fade, memories warp, memories die with you, too” (110-111). Memory creates linear time, but time rewrites
memory and thus rewrites time.
I sense this too. As my previous life is reduced to memory and
those memories dim in the ambient noise of new demands (reading books, for
instance, instead of hours carrying water from the well), time warps. Mr. Forbeh’s voice spills out of my phone,
and suddenly I’m not a student anymore.
I’m not anonymous, walking alone to class, no friends yet, no one
calling out to me. I’m Madame G,
secondary school math teacher, who can’t step out her door without the village
peeking out windows, without my neighbors shaking my hand and saying good
morning because that is more important than what you do, than what you say
next, than if you build a library or spend the rest of the day drunk on palm
wine in the bar. The emotional
connection through the clasping of hands is more important than anything else.
Christine accesses
memories through her body. “I called
this phone number,” she tells her husband, in her attempts to dial 911,
“because it was in my fingers” (26). But
sometimes her body fails her. Walking
down the stairs is as habitual as calling a well-used phone number, but she
must remind herself which foot to put down, right, left, right, left, to
prevent falling. The difference is that
the memory of calling her husband is linked to emotions, which make it a
stronger memory, just as when she tells us, “The stories people told me out of
love, about love, went into my brain through my heart—another way in which we
are able to remember” (213-214). She finds
memories through her gut, through intuition. “I wrote my name, and when I
looked at what I had scribbled, it looked correct” (27). “[S]omewhere in my gut there would come a
name that felt completely random yet so persistent that I had to trust it to be
true” (49). The brain, of course, is
also important. Lee describes the
neuroscience, and she also uses metaphor, the “invisible boulders in my brain”
(121) that must be rolled aside to access certain information.
The brain, the body,
the heart—Christine’s memories inhabit all of these places, but ultimately,
memories live in narrative. Thus the
importance of Lee writing this book.
Thus the importance of imagination, of stringing the “modules”
together. In the choppy structure of the
book, the jumble of chronology and content, it is the relationship of each
module with one another that creates the story and thus validates the
memory. “The goal is to write a story
that enters emotional memory,” Lee tells us.
The patches of memories alone do not do this. Okay, so it was difficult for young Christine
to hike. But it is the hiking struggle as
illuminated by the PFO closure, the new ability to breathe deeply and exercise,
that leaves an impression on the reader.
Lee shows us that chronology does not really matter—she jumps back and
forth between the hiking scene and the surgery.
“His life” beside “he dies” beside the beeping “monitors” beside the
“exclamation point.” This is the role Lee
attributes to the mind, to “string memories together into one cohesive
narrative” (89). This is where memories
ultimately take on meaning.
“Culture shock is brain
shock” (135), Lee writes of her parents’ immigration to the United States. Looking at the way I am processing memories
from my two years in Cameroon, I think I am going through a small form of
culture shock. My mind has cut the
narrative back into patches. I remember at
random the dry season dust on my front door, or a student’s smile. Like Christine after her stroke, I struggle
to rewrite the story in my mind, to find cohesion in the narrative. “Oh,” I’m tempted to say, as Christine says, “Well,
that didn’t happen” (130). I wonder if
my mind is protecting me. Because when I
compare those two lives, past and present, I can only be sad. I can only see the extreme wastefulness of
this society, the lack of gratitude of people given a thousand opportunities,
the dysfunction of a government that could actually maybe be functional. I can only feel heartbreak to have left my
family, my friends, a meaningful job, a relationship, in a country halfway
around the world. “It was a terrifying
experience,” Lee says of her eyelid surgery in which she was anesthetized but
awake. “It did not matter that I did not
feel pain. It mattered that I
remembered” (182). The pain is there,
but my mind is helping me out by remembering only in bits and pieces.
“There are so many ways
to say ‘okay,’” Lee writes. “It means
everything is in order, but it is used in so many circumstances where
everything is not okay” (141-2). After
her estranged mother-in-law dies, Christine writes and buries a letter that
ends up burning in a forest fire. She
dreams that her mother-in-law reads the ashes “in pieces, like a serial novel”
(142). Her dream mind connects the
letter with the fire, stitching together a story; the letter, as story itself,
is broken back into individual memories.
Our minds, which at times can destroy us, also have a way of making
things “okay,” whatever that looks like.
—Gina
Before reading your post, I hadn't thought about memory inhabiting time, about time being a patchwork of memories. I appreciate you weaving personal examples into your analysis of her work -- it makes the post come alive -- while also being able to include technical details about her writing. I hadn't really noticed the juxtaposition of past/present/future tense, and how it paints a deeper picture.
ReplyDeleteThis is one of my favorite posts, Gina, as you use your own personal re-entry discomfort and memories of Cameroon to resonate with Christine's...you don't know what you don't know. How time is strategized through the use of tenses is a great observation--one among many.
ReplyDeletee