For anyone who has been following me any amount of time, you know that I speak of life events and timeframes as "chapters." Years ago, an old wino who lived in town used to say often, "same old story, second verse," and he was inadvertently expressing the same idea. While we often associate verses with poetry or song lyrics, it can apply in a general way to a chapter too - after all, Holy Scripture is prose, and we refer to passages as verses in it too - John 3:16 for instance refers to the third chapter, and the 16th verse, or sentence if you will. There is no set length to a verse either - it can be as long as several paragraphs, or as short as a sentence fraction, depending on context. The same rules apply to chapters too - some books have chapters of a couple of pages, while others can have chapters that are over a hundred, but it still qualifies as a chapter. What applies to basic prose and poetry sort of also applies to life, and that is why I preface this with what looks like a 10th-grade English Literature lecture.
Chapters in life are also often called seasons, as they start, they have a climax, and then they end. As one ends, another starts, and this is why sometimes each of our lives grow more complex. Those seasons/chapters are often varied - some are relatively short, others can last years. But, they are still a season in life. Even within the seasons and chapters of life though, there are plot twists, crises, and other things that shape the narrative of the chapter, and they are only properly seen through the person living them. While eyewitnesses and close friends or family can observe things, they still only get a part of the whole story - it is the same with a book too. When you read a book, you may not exactly agree with the author, and there are even some cases with certain books where ambiguity exists. Some authors plan it that way, while with others it just happens. So it is with our lives too. The complexities of one's life are unique to that person, and it is largely based on how they respond to such complexities as to how the story will be shaped. If a negative response happens, then it is reflected in the inner narrative of the person experiencing it. Same with positives. This leads to some personal reflections of my own.
One of the most frustrating things for me when I am trying to document my own life experiences is that I never feel like I include adequate details. The question is though if we can include all details? The human mind is a remarkable creation in that it sort of acts as a library, but like with many libraries things can be buried and details forgotten - they are still there for the most part, but in order to uncover them there has to be a stimulus of some sort that shakes them loose. Imagine for example you are visiting a certain place, and you go into a restaurant just because your stomach is making noises and your body tells you that you need nourishment. You sit down, the waitress brings you a menu, and you order something like, say, fried chicken. Nothing exceptional about it - you like fried chicken, you are hungry, and it seems like a good idea. After about 25 minutes or so, your food is prepared and the waitress brings the plate to you - on it are a couple of pieces of really delicious-looking fried chicken, and you get a side like some fried okra or fries with it and a flaky buttermilk biscuit also comes with the meal. If you are a person of faith like I am, you then say your grace over the food, and then you dig in. You know the chicken will be good just by looking at it, so you are satisfied. But then, you take that first bite - the flavor of that chicken evokes a feeling inside you. You taste something familiar but also something you haven't had in a long time - maybe it reminds you of the Sunday dinners your grandmother cooked after church, and that feeling then becomes a full-fledged memory of something you haven't thought about in years. The memory was not lost - it was just buried under the circumstances of life and that bite of fried chicken jogged it loose and it surfaced. When this happens, there are a couple of things you should do, and let me get to that now.
If you keep a journal, it is important to write that memory down and preserve it. Even if you don't keep a journal though, write it down anyway someplace and keep it. I encourage you to do the same with your dreams as well when you have them while sleeping, because dreams say something to us as well - it can be a hodgepodge of our memories sort of pieced together, and on some occasions it could even be a message from God (don't interpret every dream as a prophetic message though, as some are just coping mechanisms for stress too - it can be easy to let dream interpretation turn into something it shouldn't, so don't let the "pizza dreams" be taken as divine revelation. It only means in that case the pepperoni on the pie was too spicy). It is important to document everything though - those revelatory moments like tasting the fried chicken, that dream you had that sort of sticks with you, etc. You will never capture every detail, and I will get into why that is shortly, but you capture enough to preserve the memory. And, that is your objective. Now, why don't we manage to capture every detail? Let's sift that out a little.
For some reason, the human brain is not programmed to capture all details of everything - I think that if that were the case, it would short-circuit our nervous system. Ultimately, only God knows the complete details of our individual lives, and if we retained vividly every detail, I would wager that whole libraries could be built on the lived experience of each individual. The human brain holds a lot, and oddly, even minute details are there but then we have another issue - the filters we have in place don't allow us to regurgitate an entire set of details, and while the ultimate reason for that is a mystery, it is also a reality we need to accept and live with too. Also, there are those unpleasant details in life we want to forget, and we can't necessarily do that either - we try mental blocks, moving on busying ourselves with details, but those negative experiences can be triggered too. It is best to also document those, and facing them will also help give some closure to whatever the negative experience was, and it is even possible to see it with a new perspective. Writing down as much as we can can be the best therapy we can engage in, and therefore we must address both positive and negative memories. So, what does all this have to do with writing? Let's visit that a bit.
Being able to be detailed and honest about your lived experience is the genesis of good writing, and the more you can express yourself in that way, the more confident you will be to develop that skill in a manner that can impact others. Of course, this also requires some mechanical skills as well. What I mean by that is one should know the basics of grammar, syntax, logic, rhetoric, and literature so that thoughts can be organized and communicated clearly and in doing so you will garner interest. This is the reason I have kept a journal for 30 years, and have been writing blogs and other things for about as long. Writing is a good outlet for tackling issues, getting one's bearings, and creating some structure to several aspects of identity - worldview, etc. And, it also has the potential to be turned into something lucrative - a number of careers have as an integral element the ability to possess creative self-expression. Also, I have learned over the years that "good writing" can be subjective - some of the best authors I like are also a train wreck for many English teachers I have had over the years. Take William Saroyan for example. I love his work, but he was no grammatical genius in many cases, but in all honesty I don't care. I don't even follow conventions myself in all honesty because the conventions can also be restrictive. While in many cases if your initial drafting of your thoughts is so raw it needs refined, you can do that later - just get them out on paper first. The best writers also start with raw material in many cases - every vase starts with raw clay, and every house starts with a pile of lumber. The craft is to take that raw material and shape it into something that has personality. Which now leads to the last part of the discussion.
A lot of this was simply dealing with mechanical issues, but let's get back to the idea of chapters and seasons. In my own life right now, I have talked about how I feel like a looming new frontier stands before me and it evokes many emotions - anticipation, fear, uncertainty, and of course hope. Writing about it does help sort out some details, and what is even more surprising is how many instances where the solution comes after hashing it out in pages of prose. It goes to show that often even the solution to a complex problem can be found within when we are looking outside, and that is the value of writing down all our lived experiences. Some things we won't see until we do so in retrospect, but in other cases, just talking about them will often open an unexpected door. Therefore, I encourage writing and expression of thought in a tangible manner that can be preserved somehow, and in doing so it may even help someone else generations in the future too.
Thank you for allowing me to share, and will see you next time.